Book Details

Experiments in Democracy : Human Embryo Research and the Politics of Bioethics
Experiments in Democracy presents a history of American debates over human embryo research from the late 1960s to the present, exploring their crucial role in shaping norms, practices, and institutions of deliberation governing the ethical challenges of modern bioscience. J. Benjamin Hurlbut details how scientists, bioethicists, policymakers, and other public figures have attempted to answer a question of great consequence: how should the public reason about aspects of science and technology that effect fundamental dimensions of human life? Through a study of one of the most significant science policy controversies in the history of the United States, Experiments in Democracy paints a portrait of the complex relationship between science and democracy, and of U.S. society's evolving approaches to evaluating and governing science's most challenging breakthroughs.
Introduction: The Politics of Experiment
1. New Beginnings
2. Producing Life, Conceiving Reason
3. Representing Reason
4. Cloning, Knowledge, and the Politics of Consensus
5. Confusing Deliberation
6. In the Laboratories of Democracy
7. Religion, Reason, and the Politics of Progress
8. The Legacy of Experiment
Notes
Index

Democracy and Prosperity: : Reinventing Capitalism through a Turbulent Century

INNOVATORS HYPOTHESIS : HOW CHEAP EXPERIMENTS ARE WORTH MORE THAN GOOD IDEAS

Derailing Democracy in Afghanistan : Elections in an Unstable Political Landscape

BIRTH OF A NATIONAL ICON : The Literary Avant-Garde and the Origins of the Intellectual in France
Popular Picks on the Month