Gerald Dworkin

Gerald Dworkin (born 1937) is a professor of moral, political and legal philosophy. He is currently Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at the University of California, Davis.

Early life and education

Dworkin earned his Ph.D. at the University of California, Berkeley in 1966.[1]

Career

Dworkin has also taught at Harvard, MIT, and the University of Illinois, Chicago. He has been a visiting Fellow of All Souls College (Oxford), the Australian National University, and the Hastings Center. He was the Centennial Visiting Professor at the London School of Economics. In 2006, he was a Distinguished Visitor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong where he gave a series of lectures on paternalism.

Dworkin's main areas of research include the nature and justification of autonomy,[2] paternalism in the criminal law,[3] and the issue of which acts may legitimately be criminalized by the state.[4]

One of Dworkin's books is a defense of physician-assisted suicide.[5] In it, he argues that doctors who approve of withdrawing patients from life support at their request, or administering pain-relief medication that is foreseen to kill the patient, or who approve of terminal sedation, are inconsistent if they condemn physician-assisted suicide. This book has been published in Spanish- and Korean-language editions.

He has published an e-book, Philosophy: A Commonplace Book, which is a collection of aphorisms, jokes, witty comments on philosophy, and other interesting quotations.

References

  1. "Gerald B. Dworkin". University of California, Davis.
  2. G. Dworkin, The Theory and Practice of Autonomy, Cambridge University Press, 1988
  3. G. Dworkin, "Paternalism", The Monist, 1972
  4. Morality, Harm, and the Law, Westview Press, 1984
  5. Dworkin, Frey and Bok, Euthanasia and Physician-assisted Suicide: For and Against, Cambridge University Press, 1998.