Abstract

The problem of the diagnosis of death only plays a vital role in the debate on the moral (im)permissibility of organ transplantation if the “dead-donor rule (DDR)”1 is endorsed as a true and valid premise. According to DDR, any transplantation of organic material (cell[s], tissue, organe[s] and/or organ system[s]), i.e. any explantation of organic material (the explant or transplant) from some person P1 (the donor of the explant or explantee) destined for the subsequent implantation of

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