1 Historical Introduction --;2 Theoretical Considerations --;3 Decision Making, Fallibility, and the Problem of Blameworthiness in Medicine --;4 Doctors and Their Patients, Patients and Their Doctors --;5 The Ongoing Dialectic Between Autonomy and Responsibility --;6 The Physician as Citizen --;7 Physicians and Patients in a Pluralist World --;8 Risk Taking: Health Professionals and Risk --;9 Organ Donation --;10 Problems in the Care of the Terminally Ill --;11 Problems at the Beginning of Life --;12 Problems of Macro-Allocation --;13 'Solving' Ethical Problems --;Appendix Summary of Sources.
When physicians in training enter their clinical years and first begin to become involved in clinical decision making, they soon find that more than the technical data they had so carefully learned is involved.