
The Ethics of Performance Enhancing Drugs in Sports
Sandra A. McCalla(Author)
McFarland & Co Inc (Publisher)
Published on 14. August 2024
Book
Paperback/Softback
120 pages
978-1-4766-9090-2 (ISBN)
Description
It may be a popular opinion that sports and ethics are incongruent or contradictory, but ethical principles in sports are in fact integral for its protection. Because of this invalid popular opinion, a new conversation on ethical principles and issues in sports is warranted. This should start here with a philosophical investigation into the areas of epistemology and autonomy with an effort to address ethical issues associated with the use of performance-enhancement drugs (doping) in sports, fair play, equity, and responsibility.
Readers are introduced to a new theoretical approach to addressing ethical issues in sports. These issues are based on arguments advanced on responsible freedom, perspective knowledge, and duties that can be utilized by sports stakeholders (athletes, team doctors, fans, sporting organizations, coaches, etc.) as they strive for success and minimize unfair practices.
Important questions are posed concerning respect for others, respect for rules, respect for the game, and respect for self. Also, an investigation into ethics and doping is conducted to unravel whether doping athletes impose undue limitations on their freedom. Thus, the idea of absolute freedom is questioned, and "privileged freedom" is looked into.
Readers are introduced to a new theoretical approach to addressing ethical issues in sports. These issues are based on arguments advanced on responsible freedom, perspective knowledge, and duties that can be utilized by sports stakeholders (athletes, team doctors, fans, sporting organizations, coaches, etc.) as they strive for success and minimize unfair practices.
Important questions are posed concerning respect for others, respect for rules, respect for the game, and respect for self. Also, an investigation into ethics and doping is conducted to unravel whether doping athletes impose undue limitations on their freedom. Thus, the idea of absolute freedom is questioned, and "privileged freedom" is looked into.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Jefferson, NC
United States
Target group
Interest Age: From 18 years
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Illustrations
bibliography, index
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 13 mm
Weight
349 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4766-9090-2 (9781476690902)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Sandra McCalla teaches philosophy at Kennesaw State University, Georgia. She has published several articles in refereed journals, as well as book chapters.
Content
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Preface
Introduction
1.¿The Business of Sports
1.1¿Sports and Games
1.2¿Sports as Competition
1.3¿Sports as Business (Careers for Athletes)
2.¿Drugs in Sports
2.1¿A Brief History of Doping
2.2¿Substance Use and Abuse
2.3¿Sports Rules and Testing Methods
3.¿Epistemology or Knowledge Acquisition in Sports
3.1¿Skepticism and Epistemology
3.2¿Athletes and Coaches as Knowers
3.3¿Knowledge Justification in Sports
3.4¿Perspectival Knowledge
4.¿Fairness and Justice in Competitive Sports
4.1¿The Principle of Fairness
4.2¿Fair Sports Rules
4.3¿Fairness as Duty
4.4¿Just Punishment
5.¿Revisiting Morality and Ethics in Sports
5.1¿The Moral Duty
5.2¿Obeying the Moral Code
5.3¿Moral/Ethical Dilemmas
6.¿Responsible Freedom
6.1¿Types of Freedom
6.2¿The Paradox of Freedom
6.3¿Athletes' Right to Freedom
6.4¿Responsibility-A Marker of Freedom and Self-Duty
7.¿Gender Concerns (Anti-Doping and Gender Rules): The Case of Intersex Female Athletes
7.1¿Understanding Intersex
7.2¿History and Justification of Sex Testing
7.3¿Gender Rules as Discriminatory and Unfair
7.4¿Unjust Intersection of Sex Test/Verification and Anti-Doping Tests
Conclusion
Index
Acknowledgments
Preface
Introduction
1.¿The Business of Sports
1.1¿Sports and Games
1.2¿Sports as Competition
1.3¿Sports as Business (Careers for Athletes)
2.¿Drugs in Sports
2.1¿A Brief History of Doping
2.2¿Substance Use and Abuse
2.3¿Sports Rules and Testing Methods
3.¿Epistemology or Knowledge Acquisition in Sports
3.1¿Skepticism and Epistemology
3.2¿Athletes and Coaches as Knowers
3.3¿Knowledge Justification in Sports
3.4¿Perspectival Knowledge
4.¿Fairness and Justice in Competitive Sports
4.1¿The Principle of Fairness
4.2¿Fair Sports Rules
4.3¿Fairness as Duty
4.4¿Just Punishment
5.¿Revisiting Morality and Ethics in Sports
5.1¿The Moral Duty
5.2¿Obeying the Moral Code
5.3¿Moral/Ethical Dilemmas
6.¿Responsible Freedom
6.1¿Types of Freedom
6.2¿The Paradox of Freedom
6.3¿Athletes' Right to Freedom
6.4¿Responsibility-A Marker of Freedom and Self-Duty
7.¿Gender Concerns (Anti-Doping and Gender Rules): The Case of Intersex Female Athletes
7.1¿Understanding Intersex
7.2¿History and Justification of Sex Testing
7.3¿Gender Rules as Discriminatory and Unfair
7.4¿Unjust Intersection of Sex Test/Verification and Anti-Doping Tests
Conclusion
Index