•  721
    Transparent Vessels?: What Organ Donors Should Be Allowed to Know about Their Recipients
    Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 41 (1): 323-332. 2013.
    After a long search, Jonathan has finally found someone willing to donate a kidney to him and thereby free him from dialysis. Meredith is Jonathan's second cousin, and she considers herself a generous person, so although she barely knows Jonathan, she is willing to help. However, as Meredith learns more about the donation process, she begins to ask questions about Jonathan: “Is he HIV positive? I heard he got it using drugs. Has he been in jail? He's already had one live donor, so what happened …Read more
  •  42
    Review of Michael Slote, Essays on the History of Ethics (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2010 (7). 2010.
  •  106
    Living with Contextualism
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 24 (2): 243-260. 1994.
  •  109
    A Progress of Sentiments: Reflections on Hume's Treatise, By Annette C. Baier (review)
    Modern Schoolman 69 (1): 59-60. 1991.
  •  111
    Hume and the contexts of politics
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 30 (2): 219-242. 1992.
  •  102
    The warm courage of national unity
    The Philosophers' Magazine 34 (34): 65-68. 2006.
  •  80
    Soldiers as agents
    American Journal of Bioethics 8 (2). 2008.
  •  202
    In part 12 of Hume's Dialogues concerning Natural Religion, Philo famously appears to reverse his course. After slicing the Argument from Design into small pieces throughout most of the first eleven parts of the Dialogues, he suddenly seems to endorse a version of it.
  •  1312
    Better brains, better selves? The ethics of neuroenhancements
    Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 17 (4): 371-395. 2007.
    : The idea of enhancing our mental functions through medical means makes many people uncomfortable. People have a vague feeling that altering our brains tinkers with the core of our personalities and the core of ourselves. It changes who we are, and doing so seems wrong, even if the exact reasons for the unease are difficult to define. Many of the standard arguments against neuroenhancements—that they are unsafe, that they violate the distinction between therapy and enhancements, that they under…Read more
  •  1335
    David Hume is an ardent supporter of the practice of religions toleration. For Hume, toleration forms part of the background that makes progress in philosophy possible, and it accounts for the superiority of philosophical thought in England in the eighteenth century. As he puts it in the introduction to the Treatise: “the improvements in reason and philosophy can only be owing to a land of toleration and of liberty” (T Intro.7; SBN xvii).1 Similarly, the narrator of part 11 of the First Enquiry …Read more
  •  117
    Religion and Newborn Screening
    with Jennifer M. Kwon
    American Journal of Bioethics 16 (1): 20-21. 2016.
    Hom and colleagues (2016) argue in favor of allowing religious exemptions to congenital critical heart disease (CCHD) newborn screening, but the logic of their position is at odds with the moral ju...