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Ending Midlife Bias

Ending Midlife Bias

New Values for Old Age

9780190949075
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Description
We live at a time when the human lifespan has increased like never before. As average lifespans stretch to new lengths, what impact should this have on our values? Should our values change over the course of our ever-increasing lifespans? Nancy S. Jecker coins the term, the life stage relativity of values, to capture the idea that at different stages of our lives, different ethical concerns shift to the foreground. During early life, infants and small children hold dear the value of being cared for and nurtured by someone they trust-and their vulnerability and dependency make these the right values for them. By early adulthood and continuing into midlife, the capacity for greater physical and emotional independencegives people reason to place more emphasis on autonomy and the ability to freely choose and carry out their plan of life. During old age, heightened risk for chronic disease and disability gives us a reason to shift our focus again, emphasizing safeguarding our central capabilities and keeping our dignity andself-respect intact.Despite different values becoming central at different stages of life, we often assume the standpoint of someone in midlife, who is in the midst of planning a future adulthood that stretches out before them. Jecker coins the term, midlife bias, to refer to the privileging of midlife. Midlife bias occurs when we assume that autonomy should be our central aim at all life stages and give it priority in a wide range of ethical decisions. The privileging of midlife raises fundamentalproblems of fairness. It also suggests the possibility of large gaps in the ethical principles and theories at hand. Ending Midlife Bias:: New Values for Old Age addresses these concerns in a step-wise fashion, focusing on later life. Jecker first introduces a philosophical framework that extends moral theorizing to older adults, addressing midlife bias, the life stage relativity of values, human capabilities and dignity, times passage, the narrative self, and justice between old and young. She then turns to policy and practice and explores ethical issues in bioethics, long term care, personalrobotic assistants, care of the dying and newly dead, ageism in medical research, the allocation of healthcare, mandatory retirement, and the future of population aging.
Product Details
OUP USA
93445
9780190949075
9780190949075

Data sheet

Publication date
2020
Issue number
1
Cover
hard cover
Pages count
360
Dimensions (mm)
156 x 235
Weight (g)
998
  • Part I: The Philosophical Framework; Chapter 1: Values Across the Lifespan; Chapter 2: What Matters for Individuals in Later Life?; Chapter 3: The Preferred Account of Human Capabilities; Chapter 4: Times Passage and the Narrative Self; Chapter 5: Justice Between Old and Young; Part II: Policy and Practice ; Chapter 6: Healthcare Across the Lifespan; Chapter 7: Who Cares?; Chapter 8: What Cares?; Chapter 9: Ageism; Chapter 10: The Dying, the Newly Dead, and the Long Gone; Chapter 11: Future People; Chapter 12: Conclusion;
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