•  17
    Ethics briefing
    with Sophie Brannan, Ruth Campbell, Veronica English, and Rebecca Mussell
    Journal of Medical Ethics 40 (3): 213-214. 2014.
    Re AA and Re P : the ‘forced caesarean’ caseOn 30 November 2013 The Telegraph reported that Essex County Council Social Services had obtained a High Court Order against a woman that allowed her to be forcibly sedated and her child removed by caesarean section and taken into care.1 The original story reported that the woman, an Italian national who had been in the UK on a short-term basis for work, had experienced ‘something of a panic attack’ and, after calling the police, was compulsorily detai…Read more
  •  23
    Ethics briefing
    with Sophie Brannan, Ruth Campbell, Veronica English, and Rebecca Mussell
    Journal of Medical Ethics 40 (7): 509-510. 2014.
    In April 2014, the European Parliament agreed the final text on a new EU Clinical Trials Regulation.1 The Regulation replaces the EU Clinical Trials Directive, which has long been criticised by various stakeholders for creating unnecessary bureaucracy and blamed, at least in part, for increased costs, time delays and a drop in clinical trial applications. The new Regulation seeks to remedy the faults of the previous legislation and make the EU an attractive place to conduct clinical trials.The R…Read more
  •  42
    Ethics briefings
    with Sophie Brannan, Ruth Campbell, Veronica English, Rebecca Mussell, and Julian C. Sheather
    Journal of Medical Ethics 41 (3): 285-286. 2015.
  •  15
    Ethics briefings
    with Sophie Brannan, Ruth Campbell, Veronica English, Rebecca Mussell, and Julian C. Sheather
    Journal of Medical Ethics 41 (7): 573-574. 2015.
  •  7
    Ethics briefing
    with Sophie Brannan, Ruth Campbell, Veronica English, Rebecca Mussell, and Julian C. Sheather
    Journal of Medical Ethics 40 (11): 789-790. 2014.
  •  13
    Ethics briefing
    with Sophie Brannan, Ruth Campbell, Veronica English, and Rebecca Mussell
    Journal of Medical Ethics 40 (9): 647-648. 2014.
  •  56
    Ethics briefing
    with Sophie Brannan, Ruth Campbell, Veronica English, Rebecca Mussell, and Julian C. Sheather
    Journal of Medical Ethics 43 (10): 723-724. 2017.
    Doctors and medical students in the UK have voted in support of the decriminalisation of abortion for women who self-administer abortions and healthcare professionals who provide abortions within the context of their clinical practice. Abortion should be treated as a medical issue rather than a criminal one. ### Background to the vote The vote took place at the end of June during the British Medical Association’s Annual Representative Meeting, where representatives of doctors and medical student…Read more
  •  31
    Ethics briefing
    with Sophie Brannan, Ruth Campbell, Veronica English, Rebecca Mussell, and Julian C. Sheather
    Journal of Medical Ethics 44 (2): 145-146. 2018.
    The British Medical Association has published a new report on health and human rights in immigration detention in the UK. Locked up, locked out outlines how aspects of current detention policies and practices are detrimental to the health of those detained and the challenges doctors face in providing healthcare in the immigration detention setting. It makes a number of recommendations aimed at addressing policy and practice which impact on health and well-being, including calling for an end to t…Read more
  •  22
    Ethics briefing
    with Sophie Brannan, Ruth Campbell, Veronica English, and Rebecca Mussell
    Journal of Medical Ethics 40 (5): 357-358. 2014.
    In February 2014, the Belgian Parliament passed legislation allowing euthanasia for terminally ill children of all ages by 86 votes to 44, with 12 abstentions. The Bill became law in early March after being signed by the King, making Belgium the first country in the world to abolish age restrictions for euthanasia. Previously, the youngest age at which euthanasia was permitted was 12 years old in The Netherlands.1Euthanasia was legalised in Belgium in 2002, and the new legislation introduces ame…Read more
  •  40
    BMA end-of-life care and physician-assisted dying project
    with Sophie Brannan, Ruth Campbell, Veronica English, Rebecca Mussell, and Julian C. Sheather
    Journal of Medical Ethics 42 (6): 409-410. 2016.
  •  34
    Assisted dying
    with Sophie Brannan, Ruth Campbell, Veronica English, Rebecca Mussell, and Julian C. Sheather
    Journal of Medical Ethics 42 (8): 554-556. 2016.
  •  19
    Inattentional blindness: Attentional set for efficient task success
    with Zhihan Liu, Karen R. Griffith, and Anne M. Aimola Davies
    Consciousness and Cognition 108 (C): 103456. 2023.
  •  6
    How history works: the reconstitution of a human science
    Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. 2016.
    The situation of historical knowledge: the historicized world -- The technology of historical knowledge: management-systems -- The logic of historical knowledge: causality, rationality, identity -- The organization of historical knowledge: categorical coordinators; rhetorical strategy -- The purpose of historical knowledge: comprehension.
  • Cognitive and motivational factors in anosognosia
    with Anne M. Aimola Davies, Jenni A. Ogden, Micheal Smithson, and Rebekah C. White
    In , Psychology Press. pp. 187-225. 2009.
  • Explaining Pathologies of Belief
    with Anne M. Aimola Davies
    In , Oxford University Press. pp. 284-324. 2009.
  •  32
    Cotard delusion, emotional experience and depersonalisation
    with Max Coltheart
    Cognitive Neuropsychiatry. forthcoming.
    Introduction: Cotard delusion—the delusional belief “I am dead”—is named after the French psychiatrist who first described it: Jules Cotard (1880, 1882). Ramachandran and Blakeslee (1998) proposed that the idea “I am dead” comes to mind when a neuropathological condition has resulted in complete abolition of emotional responsivity to the world. The idea would arise as a putative explanation: if “I am dead” were true, there would be no emotional responsivity to the world. Methods: We scrutinised …Read more
  •  17
    Ethics briefing
    with Sophie Brannan, Veronica English, Caroline Ann Harrison, Carrie Reidinger, and Julian C. Sheather
    Journal of Medical Ethics 48 (6): 427-428. 2022.
    On 7 April 2022 – coinciding with World Health Day – the British Medical Association launched its new report, Health and human rights in the new world order.1 Written during the global upheaval triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic, and published just weeks after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the report responds to a range of emerging and intensifying threats to health-related human rights globally. As the report establishes, human rights in health and healthcare matter because human suffering, …Read more
  •  7
    The Enlightenment is generally painted as a movement of ideas and society lasting from the late seventeenth to the early nineteenth century, but this book argues that the Enlightenment is an essential component of modernity itself and in fact can be seen to have lasted from the late sixteenth century to the present day. In the course of the study, Martin Davies offers an original world-view and a critique of some recent interpretations of the Enlightenment.
  •  10
    Originally published in 1981. This is a book for the final year undergraduate or first year graduate who intends to proceed with serious research in philosophical logic. It will be welcomed by both lecturers and students for its careful consideration of main themes ranging from Gricean accounts of meaning to two dimensional modal logic. The first part of the book is concerned with the nature of the semantic theorist's project, and particularly with the crucial concepts of meaning, truth, and sem…Read more
  • Anosognosia for Motor Impairments as a Delusion: Anomalies of Experience and Belief Evaluation
    with Caitlin L. McGill and Anne M. Aimola Davies
    In A. L. Mishara, P. R. Corlett, P. C. Fletcher, A. Kranjec & M. A. Schwartz (eds.), Phenomenological Neuropsychiatry: How Patient Experience Bridges Clinic with Clinical Neuroscience, Springer. forthcoming.
  • Cognitive and motivational factors in anosognosia
    with Anne M. Aimola Davies, Jenni A. Ogden, Micheal Smithso, and Rebekah C. White
    In T. Bayne & J. Fernandez (eds.), Delusion and Self-Deception: Affective and Motivational Influences on Belief Formation, Psychology Press. pp. 187-225. 2009.
  •  26
    Delusion: Cognitive Approaches—Bayesian Inference and Compartmentalisation
    with Andy Egan
    In K. W. M. Fulford, Martin Davies, Richard G. T. Gipps, George Graham, John Z. Sadler, Giovanni Stanghellini & Tim Thornton (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry, Oxford University Press. pp. 689-727. 2013.
    Cognitive approaches contribute to our understanding of delusions by providing an explanatory framework that extends beyond the personal level to the sub personal level of information-processing systems. According to one influential cognitive approach, two factors are required to account for the content of a delusion, its initial adoption as a belief, and its persistence. This chapter reviews Bayesian developments of the two-factor framework.
  • Assessment of anosognosia for motor impairments
    with A. M. A. Davies and R. C. White
    In Jennifer Gurd, Kischka M., Marshall Udo & John Charles (eds.), The Handbook of Clinical Neuropsychology, Oxford University Press. 2010.
  •  132
    Philosophy has much to offer psychiatry, not least regarding ethical issues, but also issues regarding the mind, identity, values, and volition. This has become only more important as we have witnessed the growth and power of the pharmaceutical industry, accompanied by developments in the neurosciences. However, too few practising psychiatrists are familiar with the literature in this area. The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry offers the most comprehensive reference resource for thi…Read more
  • Explaining pathologies of belief
    with Anne M. Aimola Davies
    In Matthew Broome & Lisa Bortolotti (eds.), Psychiatry as Cognitive Neuroscience: Philosophical Perspectives, Oxford University Press. pp. 284-324. 2009.
  •  21
    Failure of hypothesis evaluation as a factor in delusional belief
    with Max Coltheart
    Cognitive Neuropsychiatry 26 (4). 2021.
    INTRODUCTION: In accounts of the two-factor theory of delusional belief, the second factor in this theory has been referred to only in the most general terms, as a failure in the processes of hypothesis evaluation, with no attempt to characterise those processes in any detail. Coltheart and Davies attempted such a characterisation, proposing a detailed eight-step model of how unexpected observations lead to new beliefs based on the concept of abductive inference as introduced by Charles Sanders …Read more
  •  15
    What is Capgras delusion?
    with Max Coltheart
    Cognitive Neuropsychiatry 27 69-82. 2022.
  •  12
    Ethics briefing
    with Dominic Norcliffe-Brown, Sophie Brannan, Veronica English, Caroline Ann Harrison, and Julian C. Sheather
    Journal of Medical Ethics 48 (4): 285-286. 2022.
    In parts of the world, discussion regarding COVID-19 has shifted towards endemicity, and questions of living with, rather than directly battling, the virus. As a result, ethical questions are being refocussed. The imperative is beginning to shift towards what we can learn from the pandemic, and how we can better prepare for future global outbreaks. Among the questions that need to be addressed is what Covid-29 has taught us about how research can be conducted ethically during major global public…Read more