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The birth of ethics : phenomenological reflections on life's beginnings / Michael Van Manen.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Phenomenology of practicePublisher: New York, NY ; Abingdon, Oxon : Routledge, 2021Description: x, 128 pages ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780367627423
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 174.29263 V26b 23
LOC classification:
  • QH332  .V36 2021
Contents:
Introduction -- Section I: Before a child is born -- Conceiving ethics -- Pregnant with child -- Ultrasound imaging and virtual presence -- Nascent expectations and hope -- Meaningful outcomes -- Section II: In the cradle of the newborn intensive care unit -- Newborn encounters -- Technics of touch -- Skin-to-skin togetherness -- Imaging the child -- Attachment and responsibility -- Section III: Ethics and decisions -- Situating decisions -- Decisions without choices -- Looking for ways out of decisions -- Thinking and feeling through decisions -- Decisions and indecisions -- Falling into decisions.
Summary: From the time of conception, through the gestation of pregnancy, to the birth of a newborn child exists an extraordinary, emergent ethics. How does this ethics come into being when a child is conceived? How does the appearance of ethics in pregnancy differ from its emergence after birth? How does the original meaning of ethics relate to modern morality in decision making? In this book, Michael van Manen explores these ethical moral complexities and conceptualizations of life's beginnings. He delves into perennial and contemporary aspects of conception, pregnancy, and birth to present ethics as a fundamental phenomenon in the experiential encounter between parent and child. Even in the context of neonatal-perinatal medicine, where all manner of medical technologies and illnesses may potentially complicate the developing relation of parent and child, ethics is always already present yet also enigmatic in its origin. And yet, to approach ethical moral questions, we need to understand the inception of ethics. The Birth of Ethics: Phenomenological Reflections on Life's Beginnings is an essential text not only for health professionals and researchers but also for parents, family members, and others who care and take responsibility for newborns in need of medical care.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Shelving location Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books Main Library Graduate School Library GRD 174.29263 V26b 2021 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1-1 Available 030138

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction -- Section I: Before a child is born -- Conceiving ethics -- Pregnant with child -- Ultrasound imaging and virtual presence -- Nascent expectations and hope -- Meaningful outcomes -- Section II: In the cradle of the newborn intensive care unit -- Newborn encounters -- Technics of touch -- Skin-to-skin togetherness -- Imaging the child -- Attachment and responsibility -- Section III: Ethics and decisions -- Situating decisions -- Decisions without choices -- Looking for ways out of decisions -- Thinking and feeling through decisions -- Decisions and indecisions -- Falling into decisions.

From the time of conception, through the gestation of pregnancy, to the birth of a newborn child exists an extraordinary, emergent ethics. How does this ethics come into being when a child is conceived? How does the appearance of ethics in pregnancy differ from its emergence after birth? How does the original meaning of ethics relate to modern morality in decision making? In this book, Michael van Manen explores these ethical moral complexities and conceptualizations of life's beginnings. He delves into perennial and contemporary aspects of conception, pregnancy, and birth to present ethics as a fundamental phenomenon in the experiential encounter between parent and child. Even in the context of neonatal-perinatal medicine, where all manner of medical technologies and illnesses may potentially complicate the developing relation of parent and child, ethics is always already present yet also enigmatic in its origin. And yet, to approach ethical moral questions, we need to understand the inception of ethics. The Birth of Ethics: Phenomenological Reflections on Life's Beginnings is an essential text not only for health professionals and researchers but also for parents, family members, and others who care and take responsibility for newborns in need of medical care.

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