-
200Egalitarian justice and innocent choiceJournal of Ethics and Social Philosophy 2 (1): 1-19. 2006.This article argues that, in its standard formulation, luck-egalitarianism is false. In particular, I show that disadvantages that result from perfectly free choice can constitute egalitarian injustice. I also propose a modified formulation of luck-egalitarianism that would withstand my criticism. One merit of the modification is that it helps us to reconcile widespread intuitions about distributive justice with equally widespread intuitions about punitive justice.
-
137Translational Research Beyond Approval: A Two-Stage Ethics ReviewAmerican Journal of Bioethics 10 (8). 2010.Commentators on the ethics of translational research find it morally problematic. Types of translational research are said to involve questionable benefits, special risks, additional barriers to informed consent, and severe conflicts of interest. Translational research conducted on the global poor is thought to exploit them and increase international disparities. Some commentators support especially stringent ethical review. However, such concerns are grounded only in pre-approval translational …Read more
-
123Reconciling informed consent with prescription drug requirementsJournal of Medical Ethics 38 (10): 589-591. 2012.
-
102Afterword: returning to philosophical foundations in research ethicsJournal of Medical Ethics 43 (2): 132-133. 2017.
-
1What is it like to be a bird? : Wikler and Brock on the ethics of population healthIn Ronald Michael Green, Aine Donovan & Steven A. Jauss (eds.), Global bioethics: issues of conscience for the twenty-first century, Oxford University Press. 2008.
-
Poverty reduction and equality with strong incentives: the brighter side of false needsIn Ryberg Jesper & Petersen Thomas (eds.), New Waves in Applied Ethics, Palgrave. pp. 130--141. 2008.
-
118Informed consent, the value of trust, and hedonsJournal of Medical Ethics 40 (7): 447-447. 2014.Sissela Bok's1 and Torbjörn Tännsjö's2 writings on trust and informed consent were sources of inspiration for my article.3 It is gratifying to have a chance to respond to their thoughtful comments.Bok concurs with my scepticism that the ‘trust-promotion argument for informed consent’ can successfully generate commonsense morality's full set of informed consent norms. But she finds that argument even more wanting, perhaps so wanting as to be unworthy of critical attention. What she seems to find …Read more
-
177Nudges and Noodges: The Ethics of Health Promotion—New York StylePublic Health Ethics 6 (3). 2013.Michael Bloomberg's three terms in New York City's mayoral office are coming to a close. His model of governance for public health influenced cities and governments around the world. What should we make of that model? This essay introduces a symposium in which ethicists Sarah Conly, Roger Brownsword and Alex Rajczi discuss that legacy
-
100The Diverse Ethics of Translational ResearchAmerican Journal of Bioethics 10 (8): 19-30. 2010.Commentators on the ethics of translational research find it morally problematic. Types of translational research are said to involve questionable benefits, special risks, additional barriers to informed consent, and severe conflicts of interest. Translational research conducted on the global poor is thought to exploit them and increase international disparities. Some commentators support especially stringent ethical review. However, such concerns are grounded only in pre-approval translational …Read more
-
220Physician brain drain: Can nothing be done?Public Health Ethics 1 (2): 180-192. 2008.Next SectionAccess to medicines, vaccination and care in resource-poor settings is threatened by the emigration of physicians and other health workers. In entire regions of the developing world, low physician density exacerbates child and maternal mortality and hinders treatment of HIV/AIDS. This article invites philosophers to help identify ethical and effective responses to medical brain drain. It reviews existing proposals and their limitations. It makes a case that, in resource-poor countrie…Read more
-
138Why Treat Noncompliant Patients? Beyond the Decent Minimum AccountJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 36 (6): 572-588. 2011.Patients’ medical conditions can result from their own avoidable risk taking. Some lung diseases result from avoidable smoking and some traffic accidents result from victims’ reckless driving. Although in many nonmedical areas we hold people responsible for taking risks they could avoid, it is normally harsh and inappropriate to deny patients care because they risked needing it. Why? A popular account is that protecting everyone’s "decent minimum," their basic needs, matters more than the benefi…Read more
-
463‘Perhaps the most important primary good’: self-respect and Rawls’s principles of justicePolitics, Philosophy and Economics 4 (2): 195-219. 2005.The article begins by reconstructing the just distribution of the social bases of self-respect, a principle of justice that is covert in Rawls’s writing. I argue that, for Rawls, justice mandates that each social basis for self-respect be equalized. Curiously, for Rawls, that principle ranks higher than Rawls’s two more famous principles of justice - equal liberty and the difference principle. I then recall Rawls’s well-known confusion between self-respect and another form of self-appraisal, nam…Read more
-
80Inequality in Political Philosophy and in Epidemiology: A RemarriageJournal of Applied Philosophy. 2018.In political philosophy and in economics, unfair inequality is usually assessed between individuals, nowadays often on luck-egalitarian grounds. You have more than I do and that's unfair. By contrast, in epidemiology and sociology, unfair inequality is traditionally assessed between groups. More is concentrated among people of your class or race than among people of mine, and that's unfair. I shall call this difference the egalitarian ‘divorce’. Epidemiologists, and their ‘divorce lawyers’ Paula…Read more
-
Harvard UniversityRegular Faculty
Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America
Areas of Interest
| Normative Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |