| Introduction | p. 1 |
| Medical Ethics and Medical Jurisprudence: The Conceptual Landscape | p. 9 |
| Ethics | p. 9 |
| The Legal Landscape | p. 24 |
| A Historical Perspective on the Relationship Between Law and Morality | p. 37 |
| The Debate Between Natural Law Theory and Legal Positivism | p. 37 |
| Natural Law Theory | p. 37 |
| Legal Positivism | p. 38 |
| The Legal Enforcement of Morality | p. 41 |
| Law as the Midwife at the Birth of Bioethics | p. 43 |
| Law and the Physician-Patient Relationship: Informed Consent in Theory and Practice | p. 49 |
| From Ancient to Early Modern Medical Ethics | p. 49 |
| The Physician as Fiduciary | p. 50 |
| Early Modern Medical Jurisprudence and Consent | p. 51 |
| From Consent to Informed Consent | p. 53 |
| The Therapeutic Privilege | p. 59 |
| The Paradigm Shift | p. 59 |
| Nuremberg's Informed Consent Legacy | p. 62 |
| From Autonomy to Prospective Autonomy: Advance Directives in Bioethics, Law and Public Policy | p. 67 |
| Introduction | p. 67 |
| The Nature of Advance Directives | p. 68 |
| The Courts and Oral Directives | p. 70 |
| The Living Will | p. 74 |
| The Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care | p. 76 |
| The Patient Self-Determination Act | p. 78 |
| SUPPORT and Its Ethical Implications | p. 79 |
| Learning the Lessons of the PSDA and SUPPORT: A Reform Agenda | p. 81 |
| The Medical Directive | p. 83 |
| The Values History | p. 86 |
| Constitutional Liberty and Privacy: The Supreme Court and the Physician-Patient Relationship | p. 93 |
| Introduction | p. 93 |
| Liberty and Privacy in Constitutional Discourse | p. 93 |
| The Philosophical Dimensions of Personhood | p. 95 |
| Personhood and Substantive Due Process | p. 96 |
| Griswold v. Connecticut: Contraception and Privacy | p. 96 |
| The Dance of Intimacy: Abortion, Medical Ethics and the Constitution | p. 103 |
| Introduction | p. 103 |
| Abortion and the Sanctity of Life - The Lessons of Historical Exegesis | p. 103 |
| The Medicalization and Criminalization of Abortion | p. 105 |
| Setting the Stage for Roe v. Wade | p. 106 |
| Roe v. Wade | p. 108 |
| Abortion, Personhood, and Substantive Due Process | p. 111 |
| Concluding Remarks | p. 114 |
| Death, Dying, and the Responsibility of the Ethical Physician | p. 119 |
| Introduction | p. 119 |
| Introducing Brain Death: The Ad Hoc Committee of the Harvard Medical School | p. 120 |
| Brain Death and the Law | p. 122 |
| President's Commission Report - Defining Death | p. 123 |
| A Brief and Tentative Conceptual Analysis of Brain Death | p. 124 |
| Withholding and Withdrawing Life-Sustaining Treatment | p. 128 |
| The Supreme Court, Incompetent Patients, and Treatment Refusal | p. 132 |
| From Treatment Withdrawal to Physician-Assisted Suicide - The Euthanasia Debate | p. 137 |
| The Supreme Court and Physician-Assisted Suicide | p. 138 |
| The Oregon Death With Dignity Act and Its Opponents | p. 140 |
| Distinguishing Aggressive Palliative Measures from Physician-Assisted Suicide and Voluntary Active Euthanasia | p. 142 |
| The Role of Bioethics and the Law in Addressing Problems in End-of-Life Care | p. 144 |
| The New Synergy - Bioethics in Court | p. 151 |
| Introduction | p. 151 |
| Posner on the Problematics of Moral and Legal Theory | p. 152 |
| The Influence of Law on American Bioethics | p. 155 |
| The Bioethicist in Court | p. 157 |
| The Bioethicist as Expert Witness | p. 162 |
| Lessons Learned and Prospects for the Future of Medical Jurisprudence and Bioethics | p. 171 |
| Law and the Ethics of Clinical Research | p. 171 |
| The Fiduciary Nature of the Physician-Patient Relationship | p. 172 |
| The Patient's Right to Decide | p. 175 |
| Prospective Autonomy and Advance Directives | p. 177 |
| Physician-Assisted Suicide, Euthanasia, and Aggressive Palliative Measures | p. 178 |
| Ethical Theory and Medical Jurisprudence | p. 180 |
| Can We Avoid the Legal Enforcement of Medical Ethics? | p. 182 |
| Index | p. 187 |
| Table of Contents provided by Blackwell. All Rights Reserved. |