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95Remember Saddam's Human Guinea PigsAmerican Journal of Bioethics 3 (3): 53-53. 2003.No abstract
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250Public Health Ethics: Mapping the TerrainJournal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 30 (2): 170-178. 2002.Public health ethics, like the field of public health it addresses, traditionally has focused more on practice and particular cases than on theory, with the result that some concepts, methods, and boundaries remain largely undefined. This paper attempts to provide a rough conceptual map of the terrain of public health ethics. We begin by briefly defining public health and identifying general features of the field that are particularly relevant for a discussion of public health ethics.Public heal…Read more
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125Revising the History of Cold War Research EthicsKennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 6 (3): 223-237. 1996.: President Clinton's charge to the Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments included the identification of ethical and legal standards for evaluating government-sponsored radiation experiments conducted during the Cold War. In this paper, we review the traditional account of the history of American research ethics, and then highlight and explain the significance of a number of the Committee's historical findings as they relate to this account. These findings include both the national d…Read more
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IntroductionIn Jonathan D. Moreno & Sam Berger (eds.), Progress in Bioethics: Science, Policy, and Politics, Mit Press. 2010.
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69“The Only Feasible Means”: The Pentagon's Ambivalent Relationship with the Nuremberg CodeHastings Center Report 26 (5): 11-19. 1996.Convinced that armed conflict with the Soviet Union was all but inevitable, that such conflict would involve unconventional atomic, biological, and chemical warfare, and that research with human subjects was essential to respond to the threat, in the early 1950s the U.S. Department of Defense promulgated a policy governing human experimentation based on the Nuremberg Code. Yet the policymaking process focused on the abstract issue of whether human experiments should go forward at all, ignoring t…Read more
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136Making Sense of Consensus: Responses to Engelhardt, Hester, Kuczewski, Trotter, and ZolothCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 11 (1): 61-64. 2002.It has been a pleasure to read these papers and to contemplate their importance for what I believe to be a useful and provocative prism though which to view the field of bioethics: the nature of moral consensus. In my own most extended contribution to this literature, DecidingTogether, I did not attempt to prescribe so much as to understand the role of moral consensus in the practice of bioethics. At the end of the book, I expressed the hope that it might help trigger an examination of bioethics…Read more
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44Progress in Bioethics: Science, Policy, and Politics (edited book)MIT Press. 2010.Leading scholars debate politically progressive perspectives on bioethics and the implications for society, politics, and science in the twenty-first century.
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114In the Wake of Katrina: Has “Bioethics” Failed?American Journal of Bioethics 5 (5). 2005.No abstract
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118A response to commentators on "ethics of research involving mandatory drug testing of high school athletes in oregon"American Journal of Bioethics 4 (1). 2004.There is consensus that children have questionable decisional capacity and, therefore, in general a parent or a guardian must give permission to enroll a child in a research study. Moreover, freedom from duress and coercion, the cardinal rule in research involving adults, is even more important for children. This principle is embodied prominently in the Nuremberg Code and is embodied in various federal human research protection regulations. In a program named "SATURN", each school in the Oregon …Read more
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Frederic Rogers Kellogg, "The Formative Essays of Justice Holmes" (review)Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 21 (1): 147. 1985.
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22Discourse in the social sciences: strategies for translating models of mental illnessGreenwood Press. 1982.The authors consider the nature of explanatory models in the social sciences in order to suggest ways in which conceptual systems differ. They suggest that, in many cases, theorists, researchers and clinicians can utilize insights from rival models in building their own models, without sacrificing the integrity of their own work.
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117Biotechnology and the new right: Neoconservatism's red menaceAmerican Journal of Bioethics 7 (10). 2007.Although the neoconservative movement has come to dominate American conservatism, this movement has its origins in the old Marxist Left. Communists in their younger days, as the founders of neoconservatism, inverted Marxist doctrine by arguing that moral values and not economic forces were the primary movers of history. Yet the neoconservative critique of biotechnology still borrows heavily from Karl Marx and owes more to the German philosopher Martin Heidegger than to the Scottish philosopher a…Read more
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88Response to open Peer commentaries on "biotechnology and the new right: Neoconservatism's red menace"American Journal of Bioethics 7 (10). 2007.This Article does not have an abstract