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This book explores issues raised by past and present practices of animal enhancement in terms of their means and their goals, clarifies conceptual issues and identifies lessons that can be learned about enhancement practices, as they concern both animals and humans.
Introduction; Simone Bateman, Jean Gayon, Sylvie Allouche, J?r?me Goffette and Michela Marzano
1. Animal Enhancement: Technovisionary Paternalism and the Colonisation of Nature; Arianna Ferrari
2. Improving Animals, Improving Humans: Transpositions and Comparisons; Florence Burgat
3. Harming Some to Enhance Others; Gary Comstock
4. Sex Hormones for Humans and Animals? Enhancement and the Public Expertise of Drugs in Post-War United States and France; Jean-Paul Gaudilli?re
5. So Different and Yet So Similar: Comparing the Enhancement of Human and Animal Bodies in French law; Sonia Desmoulin-Canselier
Contributions to the volume expose and challenge a number of assumptions in unpacking and interrogating the notion of enhancement. & those interested in the direction of theory and debate about notions of enhancement, the animal question & and broader societal implications will find contributions in this volume to be useful. & This volume provides an interesting contribution to what will continue to be a substantive debate. (Colin Salter, Nanoethics, Vol. 10, 2016)Sylvie Allouche, Universit? Catholique de Lyon, France Simone Bateman, Centre for Research on Medicine, Science, Health, and Society (CERMES3), France Florence Burgat, National Institute of Agronomic Research, France Gary Comstock, North Carolina State University, USA Sonia Desmoulin-Canselier, National Centre for Scientific Research, France Arianna Ferrari, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany Jean-Paul Gaudilli?re, Centre for Research on Medicine, Science, Health, and Society (CERMES3), France Jean Gayon, Universit?lC6Copyright © 2018 - 2024 ShopSpell