Biomedical Ethics

From the Series Compact Research: Current Issues
Format Price Qty
$37.95

Advances in medicine and biology help to improve the lives of many people, yet with new technology comes new ethical questions about what is right and wrong. Through objective overviews, primary sources, and full-color illustrations this title examines Can Genetic Testing and Manipulation Be Done Ethically? Is the Use of Human Embryos in Stem Cell Research Ethical? Is Assisted Reproductive Technology Ethical? Should Doctors Be Allowed to Help Patients Die?

Interest Level Grade 7 - Grade 12
Reading Level Grade 7
Copyright 2012
Genre Nonfiction
Publisher ReferencePoint Press
Series Compact Research: Current Issues
Language English
Number of Pages 104
ISBN 9781601523686B
Title Format Print + Ebook
Release Date 2012-08-01
Author Andrea Nakaya
Dewey 174.2
 

School Library Journal

Gr 7 Up These concise volumes explore three controversial topics by combining objective narratives, opinion-based primary documents, and relevant supporting data. Each book begins with a useful overview of the issue before moving on to the fundamental questions that surround it, such as “Should Doctors Be Allowed to Help Patients Die?” “Does the Death Penalty Deter Violent Crime?” “Do the Benefits of Going Green Outweigh the Costs?” While the questions are pertinent and the answers solid in construction, the brief primary-source quotations, divorced as they are from the context of their complete arguments, are of little use to student researchers. The same can be said for the “Facts and Illustrations” sections that, while eye-catching, may only provide prefatory material for much larger issues. Although rounded out by chronologies, lists of related organizations, and print and online resources for further research, these books attempt too much while readers come away with too little.

School Library Journal

Gr 7 Up These concise volumes explore three controversial topics by combining objective narratives, opinion-based primary documents, and relevant supporting data. Each book begins with a useful overview of the issue before moving on to the fundamental questions that surround it, such as “Should Doctors Be Allowed to Help Patients Die?” “Does the Death Penalty Deter Violent Crime?” “Do the Benefits of Going Green Outweigh the Costs?” While the questions are pertinent and the answers solid in construction, the brief primary-source quotations, divorced as they are from the context of their complete arguments, are of little use to student researchers. The same can be said for the “Facts and Illustrations” sections that, while eye-catching, may only provide prefatory material for much larger issues. Although rounded out by chronologies, lists of related organizations, and print and online resources for further research, these books attempt too much while readers come away with too little.

Author: Andrea Nakaya

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