Skip to product information
1 of 1
Regular price £68.99 GBP
Regular price £85.00 GBP Sale price £68.99 GBP
Sale Sold out
Free UK Shipping

Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead

The Philosopher's Guide to Parenthood
Storks, Surrogates, and Stereotypes

Examines and deconstructs the highly interrelated biological, social, legal and moral concepts and practices that make up parenthood today.

Teresa Baron (Author)

9781009299244, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 5 January 2023

218 pages
23.5 x 15.8 x 1.7 cm, 0.47 kg

'Baron's book is a rigorously argued, lucidly written and comprehensive account of parenting rights, roles and responsibilities, showcasing the complex nature of questions about what makes someone a parent. Baron argues in favor of theorizing distinctions between biological, legal, moral and social parenthood, and demonstrates that a nuanced approach lends clarity to ethical debates. This is top-notch philosophical work that speaks to urgent contemporary dilemmas.' Amy Mullin, University of Toronto Mississauga

Our understanding of what it means to be a parent in any given context is shaped by our biological, social, legal, and moral concepts of parenthood. These are themselves subject to the influence of changing expectations, as new technologies are produced, cultural views of the family are transformed, and laws shift in response. In this book Teresa Baron provides a detailed and incisive overview of the key questions, widespread presuppositions, and dominant approaches in the field of philosophy of parenthood. Baron examines paradigm cases and problem cases alike through an interdisciplinary lens, bringing philosophy of parenthood into dialogue with research on family-making and childrearing from across the social sciences and humanities. Her book aims to answer old questions, draw out new questions, and interrogate notions that we often take for granted in this field, including the very concept of parenthood itself.

Introduction
1. Babies, blueprints, and blood ties: what makes a biological parent?
2. Social roles, stereotypes, and being 'seen' as a parent
3. 'Do you have a licence for that?' Legal parenthood and transfers of children
4. Duties, dilemmas, and (re)distribution: moral perspectives on parenthood
5. Paradigms and parental projects: the intersection of parenthood and reproductive ethics
Conclusion.

Subject Areas: Advice on parenting [VFX], Social & political philosophy [HPS], Ethics & moral philosophy [HPQ]

View full details