William F. May
American ethicist
William F. May 's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings

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Philosophy
William F. May 's Degrees
- PhD Ethics University of Chicago
Why Is William F. May Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, William Francis May is an American ethicist. May was born in Chicago and later moved to Houston, where he graduated from high school, aged sixteen. He was accepted at the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs, and sought to pursue a career in law and politics. After the death of his high school debate coach, May became interested in philosophy. At the age of 20, May spent a year in Oklahoma as an interim pastor, then enrolled at Yale Divinity School. He earned a degree in divinity in 1952, started his teaching career in theology at Smith College, and simultaneously pursued a doctorate in contemporary theology at Yale, which he obtained in 1962. Four years after completing his doctorate, May joined the Indiana University as chair of ethics. While teaching at Indiana, he received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1978. In 1985, May began teaching at Southern Methodist University as Cary M. Maguire University Professor of Ethics. He held the professorship until 2001. During his tenure at SMU, May also served as the inaugural director of the Cary M. Maguire Center for Ethics and Public Responsibility from 1995 to 1998. In 2017, the directorship of the Maguire Center for Ethics was endowed in May's name. May is a founding fellow of The Hastings Center and served on the President's Council on Bioethics from 2002 to 2004. In September 2007, James H. Billington named May the Cary and Ann Maguire Chair in American History and Ethics at the John W. Kluge Center. May retained the position for three months.
William F. May 's Published Works
Published Works
- Code, covenant, contract, or philanthropy. (1975) (116)
- The Physician's Covenant: Images of the Healer in Medical Ethics (1983) (112)
- The Beleaguered Rulers: The Public Obligation of the Professional (1992) (74)
- DOING ETHICS: THE BEARING OF ETHICAL THEORIES ON FIELDWORK* (1980) (55)
- Medicine and moral reasoning: The virtues in a professional setting (1984) (52)
- Religious justifications for donating body parts. (1985) (50)
- The Patient's Ordeal (1991) (48)
- Professional Ethics: Setting, Terrain, and Teacher (1980) (37)
- Who cares for the elderly? (1982) (35)
- Money and the Medical Profession (1997) (21)
- Physician-assisted suicide: Toward a comprehensive understanding (1995) (17)
- The Virtues and Vices of the Elderly (2020) (13)
- Professional ethics, the university, and the journalist (1986) (12)
- Parenting, Bonding, and Valuing the Retarded (1984) (7)
- The Medical Covenant: An Ethics of Obligation or Virtue? (1994) (7)
- The President's Council on Bioethics: My Take on Some of Its Deliberations (2005) (6)
- Testing the Medical Covenant: Caring for Patients with Advanced Dementia (2012) (5)
- Speciation (review) (2005) (5)
- The right to know and the right to create. (1978) (4)
- WHY THEOLOGY AND RELIGIOUS STUDIES NEED EACH OTHER (1984) (4)
- Testing the National Covenant: Fears and Appetites in American Politics (2011) (4)
- Professional Care: Its Meaning and Practice (1984) (4)
- Testing the Medical Covenant: Active Euthanasia and Health Care Reform (2004) (4)
- The ethics of health care reform. (1994) (4)
- On the many voices of bioethics. (1994) (4)
- Money and the Professions: Medicine and Law (1999) (4)
- The ethical foundations of health care reform. (1994) (3)
- From obscurity to center stage. (1981) (2)
- Corporate Support of Higher Education (1970) (2)
- Brain death: anencephalics and aborted fetuses. (1990) (2)
- Professionals, administrators, and hospitals: moral conflicts. (1980) (1)
- The Religious Underpinnings of the Marketplace (2012) (1)
- Religious obstacles and warrants for the donation of body parts. (1988) (1)
- Moral Leadership in the Corporate Setting (1983) (1)
- On not facing death alone. The trauma of dying need not mean the eclipse of the human. (1971) (1)
- Surrogate motherhood and the marketplace. (1988) (1)
- Daniel Callahan: on living (well) within limits. (1996) (1)
- The Shift in Political Anxieties in the West: From "The Russians Are Coming" to "The Coming Anarchy" (2003) (1)
- Institutions as Symbols of Death (1976) (1)
- The Right to Die and the Obligation to Care: Allowing to Die, Killing for Mercy, and Suicide (2019) (1)
- Sacred or for sale? The human body in the age of biotechnology. (1990) (0)
- [Book Review of] What Is Marriage? Marriage in the Catholic Church , by Theodore Mackin, S.J. (1983) (0)
- A More Spacious View of Human Intelligence (1989) (0)
- Rising to the occasion of our death. (1990) (0)
- Some Skeptical Thoughts About Active Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide (1994) (0)
- The molested. (1991) (0)
- Between Ideology and Interdependence (1977) (0)
- Light at the End of the Tunnel (1974) (0)
- Announcements (1997) (0)
- Listening carefully. (1994) (0)
- Responses to Professors Elizabeth Bounds, Michael G. Cartwright and Laurie Zoloth in their comments on Testing the National Covenant (2014) (0)
- The Issues Before Us (1971) (0)
- Images of the Healer (2003) (0)
- Containing Runaway Fear in Foreign Policy: Recovering Our National Identity (2008) (0)
- Editorial statement (2003) (0)
- Spirit, Emotion, & Meaning: The Many Voices of Bioethics (1994) (0)
- COMMENT ON CASE 13 (Sept 1983 AN, p 24) (1983) (0)
- What Needs Improving at R&D—The Chief Executive's Viewpoint (1967) (0)
- Testing the National Covenant (2011) (0)
- Afterthe Us Supreme Court Decisions: the Politics Ofassisted Suicide Andthe Church's Role (1998) (0)
- Catholic perspectives : the right to die (1980) (0)
- Book Reviews : Stewards of Life: bioethics and pastoral care, by Sondra Ely Wheeler. Nashville: Abingdon, 1996. 126 pp. pb. US$12.95. ISBN 0-687-02087-5 (1998) (0)
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