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140Surrogate Motherhood and Abortion for Fetal AbnormalityBioethics 29 (8): 529-535. 2015.A diagnosis of fetal abnormality presents parents with a difficult – even tragic – moral dilemma. Where this diagnosis is made in the context of surrogate motherhood there is an added difficulty, namely that it is not obvious who should be involved in making decisions about abortion, for the person who would normally have the right to decide – the pregnant woman – does not intend to raise the child. This raises the question: To what extent, if at all, should the intended parents be involved in d…Read more
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8Right action and the targets of virtueIn S. van Hooft, N. Athanassoulis, J. Kawall, J. Oakley & L. van Zyl (eds.), The Handbook of Virtue Ethics, Acumen Publishing. 2014.A critical discussion of Christine Swanton's target-centred account of right action.
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432Agent-based Virtue Ethics and the Problem of Action GuidanceJournal of Moral Philosophy 6 (1): 50-69. 2009.Agent-based accounts of virtue ethics, such as the one provided by Michael Slote, base the rightness of action in the motive from which it proceeds. A frequent objection to agent-basing is that it does not allow us to draw the commonsense distinction between doing the right thing and doing it for the right reasons, that is, between act-evaluation and agent-appraisal. I defend agent-basing against this objection, but argue that a more fundamental problem for this account is its apparent failure t…Read more
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221Virtue ethics and right actionIn Daniel C. Russell (ed.), The Cambridge companion to virtue ethics, Cambridge University Press. 2013.A discussion of three virtue -ethical accounts of right action: a qualified-agent account, agent-based account, and a target-centred account
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150New Waves in Ethics (review)Australasian Journal of Philosophy 90 (4): 819-819. 2012.Australasian Journal of Philosophy, Volume 0, Issue 0, Page 1, Ahead of Print
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194Intentional Parenthood and the Nuclear FamilyJournal of Medical Humanities 23 (2): 107-118. 2002.Reproductive techniques and practices, ranging from ordinary birth-control measures and artificial insemination to embryo transfer and surrogate motherhood, have greatly enhanced our range of reproductive choices. As a consequence, they pose a number of difficult moral and legal questions with regard to the formation of a family and our conception of parenthood. A view that is becoming increasingly common is that parental rights and responsibilities should not be based on genetic relationships b…Read more
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55Character as Moral Fiction by Mark Alfano, 2013 Cambridge, Cambridge University Press 226 pp, £55.00 (hb) (review)Journal of Applied Philosophy 31 (1): 104-106. 2014.
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129Surrogacy, Compensation, and Legal Parentage: Against the Adoption ModelJournal of Bioethical Inquiry 12 (3): 383-387. 2015.Surrogate motherhood is treated as a form of adoption in many countries: the birth mother and her partner are presumed to be the parents of the child, while the intended parents have to adopt the baby once it is born. Other than compensation for expenses related to the pregnancy, payment to surrogates is not permitted. We believe that the failure to compensate surrogate mothers for their labour as well as the significant risks they undertake is both unfair and exploitative. We accept that introd…Read more
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222Beyond altruistic and commercial contract motherhood: The professional modelBioethics 27 (7): 373-381. 2012.It has become common to distinguish between altruistic and commercial contract motherhood (or ‘surrogacy’). Altruistic arrangements are based on the ‘gift relationship’: a woman is motivated by altruism to have a baby for an infertile couple, who are free to reciprocate as they see fit. By contrast, in commercial arrangements both parties are motivated by personal gain to enter a legally enforceable agreement, which stipulates that the contract mother or ‘surrogate’ is to bear a child for the in…Read more
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284Rightness and Goodness in Agent-based Virtue EthicsJournal of Philosophical Research 36 103-114. 2011.In Morals from Motives (2001) Michael Slote puts forward an agent-based virtue ethics that purports to derive an account of deontic terms from aretaic evaluations of motives or character traits. In this view, an action is right if and only if it proceeds from a good or virtuous motive or at least does not come from a bad motive, and wrong if it comes from a bad motive. I argue that Slote does not provide an account of right action at all, that is, if ‘right action’ is understood in the strict de…Read more
Hamilton, Waikato, New Zealand
Areas of Specialization
| Normative Ethics |
| Applied Ethics |
| Value Theory |
Areas of Interest
| Moral Character |
| Moral Education |
| Moral Judgment |
| Moral Reasoning and Motivation |
| Moral Emotion |