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38Darwin, Marx and Freud: Their Influence on Moral TheorySpringer. 1984.hope of obtaining a comprehensive and coherent understand ing of the human condition, we must somehow weave together the biological, sociological, and psychological components of human nature and experience. And this cannot be done indeed, it is difficult to even make sense of an attempt to do it-without first settling our accounts with Darwin, Marx, and Freud. The legacy of these three thinkers continues to haunt us in other ways as well. Whatever their substantive philosophical differences in …Read more
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2Applied ethics and the vocation of social scienceIn Joseph P. DeMarco, Richard M. Fox & Michael D. Bayles (eds.), New directions in ethics: the challenge of applied ethics, Routledge and Kegan Paul. pp. 205--217. 1986.
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33Ethics, The Social Sciences, and Policy AnalysisSpringer. 1983.The social sciences playa variety of multifaceted roles in the policymaking process. So varied are these roles, indeed, that it is futile to talk in the singular about the use of social science in policymaking, as if there were one constant relationship between two fixed and stable entities. Instead, to address this issue sensibly one must talk in the plural about uses of dif ferent modes of social scientific inquiry for different kinds of policies under various circumstances. In some cases, the…Read more
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80Relational Ethics for Public Health: Interpreting Solidarity and CareHealth Care Analysis 27 (1): 4-12. 2019.This article defends ‘relational theorizing’ in bioethics and public health ethics and describes its importance. It then offers an interpretation of solidarity and care understood as normatively patterned and psychologically and socially structured modes of relationality; in a word, solidarity and care understood as ‘practices.’ Solidarity is characterized as affirming the moral standing of others and their membership in a community of equal dignity and respect. Care is characterized as paying a…Read more
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49Solidarity and Care Coming of Age: New Reasons in the Politics of Social Welfare PolicyHastings Center Report 48 (7): 19-24. 2018.Aging brings about the ordeal of coping. Younger people also cope, but for those in old age, the ordeal is so often elegiac, forced upon the self by changing functions within the body and by the outside social world, with its many impediments to the continuity of former roles, pursuits, and self‐identities. Coping with change can be affirming, but when what is being forgone seems more valuable than what lies ahead, it is travail. For most, the coping is managed more moderately by a sense of resi…Read more
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76Solidarity and care as relational practicesBioethics 32 (9): 553-561. 2018.Many working in bioethics today are engaging in forms of normative interpretation concerning the meaningful contexts of relational agency and institutional structures of power. Using the framework of relational bioethics, this article focuses on two significant social practices that are significant for health policy and public health: the practices of solidarity and the practices of care. The main argument is that the affirming recognition of, and caring attention paid to, persons as moral subje…Read more
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135De-extinction and ConservationHastings Center Report 47 (S2). 2017.We are living in what is widely considered the sixth major extinction. Most ecologists believe that biodiversity is disappearing at an alarming rate, with up to 150 species going extinct per day according to scientists working with the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity. Part of the reason the loss signified by biological extinction feels painful is that it seems irremediable. These creatures are gone, and there's nothing to be done about it. In recent years, however, the possibil…Read more
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109The Moral Imagination of De-extinctionHastings Center Report 47 (2). 2017.We are living in what is widely considered the sixth major extinction. Most ecologists believe that biodiversity is disappearing at an alarming rate, with up to 150 species going extinct per day according to scientists working with the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity. Part of the reason the loss signified by biological extinction feels painful is that it seems irremediable. These creatures are gone, and there's nothing to be done about it. In recent years, however, the possibil…Read more
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68Introduction to conceptual issues in health and society: Neglected social and relational experiences and care approachesJournal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 36 (2): 61-63. 2016.
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88Special Supplement: Ethics and Trusteeship for Health Care: Hospital Board Service in Turbulent TimesHastings Center Report 32 (4). 2002.
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77Nudging for health and the predicament of agency: The relational ecology of autonomy and careJournal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 36 (2): 81-99. 2016.This article reflects on the implications of the concept of health and the questions it poses for moral philosophy, psychology, and the panoply of professions that are involved in the practices of care and in the ethics of individual rights, dignity, and autonomy. Significant among these questions is what we call “the predicament of agency.” The predicament involves the ethical tensions—arising within the broad concept of health and flourishing, but also in concrete everyday practices and relati…Read more
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65Review of Bruce Jennings and Daniel Callahan: Representation and Responsibility: Exploring Legislative EthicsEthics 97 (2): 485-486. 1987.
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90Special Supplement: New Directions in Nursing Home EthicsHastings Center Report 21 (2): 1. 1991.
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150Possibilities of consensus: Toward democratic moral discourseJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 16 (4): 447-463. 1991.The concept of consensus is often appealed to in discussions of biomedical ethics and applied ethics, and it plays an important role in many influential ethical theories. Consensus is an especially influential notion among theorists who reject ethical realism and who frame ethics as a practice of discourse rather than a body of objective knowledge. It is also a practically important notion when moral decision making is subject to bureaucratic organization and oversight, as is increasingly becomi…Read more
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165The ordeal of reminding: Traumatic brain injury and the goals of careHastings Center Report 36 (2): 29-37. 2006.The appropriate goal of care for a person with a traumatic brain injury is rehabilitation in the broad, etymological sense of the word. The task is to bring the person back to the conditions of the living of a life. This requires the rehabilitation of the mind—the reconstruction of a subject.
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72Public Administration: In Search of Democratic ProfessionalismHastings Center Report 17 (1): 18-20. 1987.
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163Toward An Expanded Vision of Clinical Ethics Education: From the Individual to the InstitutionKennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 1 (3): 225-245. 1991.This paper advances a new paradigm in clinical ethics education that not only emphasizes development of individual cli but also focuses on the institutional context within which health care professionals work. This approach has been applied to the goal of improving the care provided to critically and terminally ill adults. The model has been adopted by about thirty hospitals and nursing homes; additional institutions will soon join the program, entitled Decisions Near the End of Life. Here, we d…Read more
Bruce Jennings
Vanderbilt University
Center for Humans and Nature
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Center for Humans and NatureSenior Fellow (Part-time)
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The Hastings CenterSenior Advisor (Part-time)
Nashville, Tennessee, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Applied Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| Applied Ethics |
| Normative Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |