Madison, Wisconsin, United States of America
Areas of Interest
Applied Ethics
  • According to Autumn Fiester, the Presumption of Restraint—the thesis that an application of biotechnology to an animal is unethical unless backed by morally compelling reasons—is justified by five ethical claims. In this commentary, I explore the relevance of what Derek Parfit has dubbed the Non-Identity Problem for the implications of one of these claims, the Animal Welfare Claim. I conclude that while the Animal Welfare Claim condemns the alteration of founder animals in ways that are bad for …Read more
  •  71
    Review of Julian Savulescu, Nick Bostrom (eds.), Human Enhancement (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2010 (2). 2010.
  •  141
    In Defense of the Moral Relevance of Species Boundaries
    American Journal of Bioethics 3 (3): 37-38. 2003.
    No abstract
  •  201
    At the edge of humanity: Human stem cells, chimeras, and moral status
    Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 15 (4): 347-370. 2005.
    : Experiments involving the transplantation of human stem cells and their derivatives into early fetal or embryonic nonhuman animals raise novel ethical issues due to their possible implications for enhancing the moral status of the chimeric individual. Although status-enhancing research is not necessarily objectionable from the perspective of the chimeric individual, there are grounds for objecting to it in the conditions in which it is likely to occur. Translating this ethical conclusion into …Read more
  •  93
    The political import of intrinsic objections to genetically engineered food
    with Thomas Hedemann
    Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 18 (2): 191-210. 2005.
    Many people object to genetically engineerehd (GE) food because they believe that it is unnatural or that its creation amounts to playing God. These objections are often referred to as intrinsic objections, and they have been widely criticized in the agricultural bioethics literature as being unsound, incompatible with modern science, religious, inchoate, and based on emotion instead of reason. Many of their critics also argue that even if these objections did have some merit as ethicalobjection…Read more
  • The problem: we’re spending a lot without commensurate benefit Spending: 1. Health costs are about 14% of GNP, and are expected to exceed 30% by the year 2030 2. Estimated that the use of new technology and the overuse of existing technology accounts..