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The Oxford handbook of philosophy and disability / edited by Adam Cureton and David Wasserman.

Contributor Wasserman, David T. editor.

ImprintNew York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2020]

Descriptionxlv, 799 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm

Note:Part one. Concepts, models, and perspectives of disability -- Theoretical strategies to define disability / Jonas-Sébastien Beaudry -- In pursuit of justice for disability: model neutrality revisited / Anita Silvers -- Disability, health, and difference / Jerome Bickenbach -- Habilitative health and disability / Lawrence C. Becker -- Philosophy and the apparatus of disability / Shelley L. Tremain -- Disability liberation theology / Rosemarie Garland-Thomson --Part two. Well-being, adaptation, and causing disability -- Disabilities and well-being: the bad and the neutral / Joshua Shepherd -- Causing disability, causing non-disability: what's the moral difference / Joseph A. Stramondo and Stephen M. Campell -- Why inflicting disability is wrong: the mere-difference view and the causation-based objection / Julia Mosquera -- Evaluative diversity and the (ir)relevance of well-being / Sean Aas -- Part three. Justice, equality, and inclusion -- Contractualism, disability, and inclusion / Christie Hartley -- Civic republican disability justice / Tom O'Shea -- Disability and disadvantage in the capabilities approach / Christopher A. Riddle -- Disability and partial compliance theory / Leslie Francis -- Fair difference of opportunity / Adam Cureton and Alexander Kaufman -- The disability case against assisted dying / Danny Scoccia -- Part four. Knowledge and embodiment -- Epistemic exclusion, injustice, and disability / Jacke Leach Scully -- What's wrong with "you say you're happy but..." reasoning? / Jason Marsh -- Interactions with delusional others: reflections on epistemic failures and virtues / Josh Dohmen -- Disability, rationality, and justice: disambiguating adaptive preferences / Jessica Begon -- Part five. Respect, appreciation, and care -- Ideals of appreciation and expressions of respect / Thomas E. Hill, Jr. -- The limiting role or respect / Adam Cureton -- Respect, identification, and profound cognitive impairment / John Vorhaus -- Care and disability: friends or foes / Eva Feder Kittay -- A dignitarian approach to disability: from moral status to social status / Linda Barclay -- Part six. Moral status and significant mental disabilities -- Cognitive disability and moral status / Alice Crary -- Dignity, respect, and cognitive disability / Suzy Killmister -- On moral status and intellecutal disability: challenging and expanding the debates / Licia Carlson -- Part seven. Intellectual and psychiatric disability --Neurodiversity, autism, and psychiatric disability: the harmful dysfunction perspective / Jerome C. Wakefield, David Wasserman, and Jordan A. Conrad -- Beyond instrumental value: respecting the will of others and deciding on their behalf / Dana Howard and David Wendler -- Educational justice for students with intellecutal disabilities / Lorella Terzi -- Part eight. Technology and enhancement -- A symmetrical view of disability and enhancement / Stephen M. Campbell and David Wasserman -- Cognitive disability and embodied, extended minds / Zoe Drayson and Andy Clark -- The visible and the invisible: disability, assistive technology, and stigma / Coreen McGuire and Havi Carel -- Neurotechnologies and justice by, with, and for disabled people / Sara Goering and Eran Klein -- Second thoughts on enhancement and disability / Melinda C. Hall -- Part nine. Health-care allocation -- Cost-effectiveness analysis and disability discrimination / Greg Bognar -- Prioritization and parity: which disabled newborn infants should be candidates for scare life-saving treatment? / Dominic JC Wilkinson and Julian Savulescu -- Part ten. Reproduction and parenting -- Why people with cognitive disabilities are justified in feeling disquieted by prenatal testing and selective termination / Chris Kaposy -- Reproductive choice, in context: avoiding excess and deficiency? / Richard Hull and Tom Shakespeare -- Bioethics, disability, and selective reproductive technology: taking intersectionality seriously / Christian Munthe -- Procreation and intellectual disability: a Kantian approach / Samuel J. Kerstein -- Parental autonomy, children with disabilities, and horizontal identities / Mary Crossley.

Bibliography Note:Includes bibliographical references and index.

Note:This Handbook introduces philosophers, as well as other scholars in the humanities and social sciences, to one of the most dynamic new areas of philosophical inquiry. Disability raises some of the deepest conceptual and normative issues about human embodiment and well-being; dignity, respect, justice and equality; and personal and social identity. But it also raises pressing practical questions for educational, health, reproductive, and technology policy, andconfronts controversial questions about the scope and direction of the human and civil rights movements. The Handbook addresses these issues and more, with contributions from some of the most prominent philosophers in the field. The clarity it brings to these discussions demonstrates fully the continuedcentrality and importance of philosophical inquiry.



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Contributor
Wasserman, David T. editor.
Cureton, Adam Steven, 1981- editor.
Title:
Philosophy and disability
Subject:
Disabilities -- Philosophy.