Acknowledgments
Section One: Morals, Markets, and Medicine
1. Organs for Sale? Normative Entanglements in the Public Sphere
2. Public Morality: Altruism, Rhetoric, and Bioethics
Section Two: The Rhetorical Positions, Arguments, and Justifications in Human Organ Procurement
3. The Case for an Altruistic Supply System
4. The Case for a Market-Based Supply System
Section Three: Morality, Neoliberalism, and the Prospects of Reasoning Together in a Democracy
5. The Neoliberal Graft: Medicine, Morality, and Markets in Liberal-Democratic Regimes
6. Good Reasons: Metanormativity and Categoricity
7. Weighing Reasons: Telic Orientation, Rhetorical Force, and Normative Force
Section Four: Weighing Reasons in the Organ Debate
8. The Scope of the Market: Exploitation, Coercion, Paternalism, and Legal Consistency
9. What Money Cannot Buy and What Money Ought Not Buy: Dignity, Motives, and Markets
Conclusion: What Kind of Policy for What Kind of Society?
Notes
Bibliography
Index