To contain the Minotaur, the ancient artificer Daedalus crafted a maze
so intricate that it bewildered even its maker. Contemporary
medicine--Hippocrates' Maze--is every bit as bewildering, so much so
that a new and distinct field, bioethics, has been created to help
professional caregivers, patients, and families navigate their way
through it. In Nelson's typically inviting and graceful style, the
essays collected in Hippocrates' Maze explore the labyrinth of
contemporary health care, and arrive at some unusual findings about
death and decisionmaking, justice and families, cloning and kinship, and
organ donation and intimacy. However, the book's most distinctive
conclusions concern bioethics itself: the field is not best seen solely
as a source of good advice to doctors, but rather as a way of better
understanding our humanity.