Introduction: Death Unterrible 1. Posthumous Harm and Interest-based Accounts of Well-being 2. Further Criticisms of the Possibility of Posthumous Harm 3. The Impossibility of Posthumous Harm 4. Can the Dead be Wronged? 5. Why Death is Not a Harm to the One Who Dies 6. Fearless Symmetry 7. Epicureanism, Suicide, and Euthanasia 8 . Epicureanism and Organ Procurement 9. Further Bioethical Applications of Full-blooded Epicureanism Conclusion
Biography
James Stacey Taylor is Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy, Religion, and Classics at The College of New Jersey.
"...Taylor's argumentative stance adds to the richness of engagement with the views of numerous scholars the discussion moves from one intriguing thought experiment to the next. [The book's arguments were]...provocative and weighty, and this volume makes an important contribution to the ongoing debate." -Robert S. Olick, Suny Upstate Medical University in Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews






