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201The Triumph of Autonomy in Bioethics and Commercialism in American HealthcareCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 16 (4): 415. 2007.Justifying his proposal for “health savings accounts,” which would allow individuals to set aside tax-free dollars against future healthcare needs, President Bush has said that “Health savings accounts all aim at empowering people to make decisions for themselves.” Who could disagree with such a sentiment? Although bioethicists may be among those who express skepticism that personal health savings accounts will be part of the needed “fix” of our healthcare financing system, self determination ha…Read more
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54Review of Francois Ansermet and Pierre Magistretti. Biology of Freedom: Neural Plasticity, Experience, and the Unconscious, trans. Susan Fairfield. 1 (review)American Journal of Bioethics 8 (5): 36-37. 2008.This Article does not have an abstract
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Bioethics progressingIn Jonathan D. Moreno & Sam Berger (eds.), Progress in Bioethics: Science, Policy, and Politics, Mit Press. pp. 1. 2010.
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16Physicians have long tinkered with ways to "improve" the human brain, but as our understanding of that organ's inner workings quickly grows, artificial enhancement is becoming more feasible. Military research is at the forefront of this work, much of it focused on drugs. The goal is to produce a better soldier, but the emerging techniques could just as easily be applied to any individual. The military wants to juice up personnel's brains because the human being is the weakest instrument of warfa…Read more
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90Goodbye to All That The End of Moderate Protectionism in Human Subjects ResearchHastings Center Report 31 (3): 9-17. 2001.Federal policies on human subjects research have performed a near‐about face. In the 1970s, policies were motivated chiefly by a belief that subjects needed protection from the harms and risks of research. Now the driving concern is that patients, and the populations they represent, need access to the benefits of research.
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43Protection of children and adolescents in psychiatric research: an unfinished businessHEC Forum 17 (3): 210-226. 2005.
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210Ethics by committee: The moral authority of consensusJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 13 (4): 411-432. 1988.Consensus is commonly identified as the goal of ethics committee deliberation, but it is not clear what is morally authoritative about consensus. Various problems with the concept of an ethics committee in a health care institution are identified. The problem of consensus is placed in the context of the debate about realism in moral epistemology, and this is shown to be of interest for ethics committees. But further difficulties, such as the fact that consensus at one level of discourse need not…Read more
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60The Name of the EmbryoHastings Center Report 36 (5): 3-3. 2006.What is above all needed is to let the meaning choose the word, and not the other way around.
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139Consensus, contracts, and committeesJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 16 (4): 393-408. 1991.Following a brief account of the puzzle that ethics committees present for the Western Philosophical tradition, I will examine the possibility that social contract theory can contribute to a philosophical account of these committees. Passing through classical as well as contemporary theories, particularly Rawls' recent constructivist approach, I will argue that social contract theory places severe constraints on the authority that may legitimately be granted to ethics committees. This, I conclud…Read more
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45The Dewey-Morris Debate in RetrospectTransactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 19 (1). 1983.
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161Human Experiments and National Security: The Need to Clarify PolicyCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 12 (2): 192-195. 2003.On September 4, 2001, press reports indicated that the Defense Intelligence Agency of the U.S. Department of Defense planned to reproduce a strain of anthrax virus suspected of being held in Russian laboratories. According to the same reports, the Central Intelligence Agency, under the auspices of Project Clear Vision, is engaged in building replicas of bomblets believed to have been developed by the former Soviet Union. These small bombs were designed to disperse biological agents, including an…Read more
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42In the wake of terror: medicine and morality in a time of crisis (edited book)MIT Press. 2003.Timely and provocative essays on bioethical questions brought to the forefront by the bioterrorist threat.
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91Detainee Ethics: Terrorists as Research SubjectsAmerican Journal of Bioethics 3 (4): 32-33. 2003.
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90The medical exam as political humiliationAmerican Journal of Bioethics 4 (2): 20. 2004.This Article does not have an abstract
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66Bioethics and the National Security StateJournal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 32 (2): 198-208. 2004.it is mandatory that in building up our strength, we enlarge upon our technical superiority by an accelerated exploitation of the scientific potential of the United States and our allies. National Security Council, NSC-G8: United States Objectives and Program for National Security April 14, 1950 Innovation within the armed forces will rest on experimentation with new approaches to warfare, strengthening joint operations, exploiting U.S. intelligence advantages, and takingfull advantage of scienc…Read more
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95Remember Saddam's Human Guinea PigsAmerican Journal of Bioethics 3 (3): 53-53. 2003.No abstract
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247Public 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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IntroductionIn Jonathan D. Moreno & Sam Berger (eds.), Progress in Bioethics: Science, Policy, and Politics, Mit Press. 2010.
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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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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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42Progress 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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108In the Wake of Katrina: Has “Bioethics” Failed?American Journal of Bioethics 5 (5). 2005.No abstract