•  18
    In a recent New York Times article (Ghorayshi, 2025) discussing the expansion of autism diagnosis and the blurring of the line between “profound” and “non-profound” forms of the condition, the moth...
  •  28
    Ethics of AI in medicine: how smarter systems lead to tougher judgments
    Journal of Medical Ethics 52 (e1): 1-3. 2026.
    The stakes in medicine are high. Crucial decisions, often involving matters of life and death, have to be made quickly. However, medicine is practised under great uncertainty. Clinicians sometimes lack the evidence required to diagnose or treat patients with confidence; patients struggle to know when to seek care; and policymakers must design rules or plan interventions using incomplete data. When faced with a decision problem, it is often unclear what the right course of action is or how to res…Read more
  •  28
    Ethics and Regulation of Human Brain Organoid Research: Recommendations from the Asia Pacific Neuroethics Working Group
    with Shu Ishida, Brett J. Kagan, Masanori Kataoka, Julian Koplin, Sebastian Porsdam Mann, Jonathan Lewis, Heather Browning, Alexandre Erler, Faisal Feroz, Tamami Fukushi, Søren Holm, Masatoshi Kokubo, Stephen Latham, Andrea Lavazza, Ilhak Lee, Tsung-Ling Lee, David Lyreskog, Jerry Menikoff, Takuya Niikawa, Naoya Nagaishi, Eisuke Nakazawa, Serene Ong, Koji Ota, Christopher Register, Walter Veit, Ji Hyun Yang, Shang Long Yeo, Tsutomu Sawai, and Julian Savulescu
    Asian Bioethics Review 1-31. forthcoming.
    Human brain organoids (HBOs) are three-dimensional structures derived from human stem cells that model aspects of brain development and function, offering potentially unprecedented opportunities for studying neurological disorders and for developing treatments. This consensus paper presents recommendations from the Asia Pacific Neuroethics Working Group, developed through interdisciplinary collaboration among scientists, bioethicists, philosophers, and legal scholars who convened in Singapore in…Read more
  •  210
    Ethics and Regulation of Human Brain Organoid Research: Recommendations from the Asia Pacific Neuroethics Working Group
    with Shu Ishida, Brett J. Kagan, Masanori Kataoka, Julian Koplin, Sebastian Porsdam Mann, Jonathan Lewis, Heather Browning, Søren Holm, Koji Ota, Walter Veit, Shang Long Yeo, and Tsutomu Sawai
    Asian Bioethics Review 1-31. 2026.
    Human brain organoids (HBOs) are three-dimensional structures derived from human stem cells that model aspects of brain development and function, offering potentially unprecedented opportunities for studying neurological disorders and for developing treatments. This consensus paper presents recommendations from the Asia Pacific Neuroethics Working Group, developed through interdisciplinary collaboration among scientists, bioethicists, philosophers, and legal scholars who convened in Singapore in…Read more
  •  110
    On Religious Influence in Bioethics: The Limits of Pluriversalism
    with Giovanni Spitale, Federico Germani, Sebastian Porsdam Mann, Maide Barış, Marco Annoni, Kiarash Aramesh, Zohar Lederman, Calvin W. L. Ho, Karel Caals, Ambra D'Imperio, Marcello Ienca, Shenuka Singh, Debora Spagnolo, and Nikola Biller-Andorno
    Bioethics 39 (6): 620-629. 2025.
    The World Congress of Bioethics held in Qatar in 2024 (WCB 2024) sparked controversy around the role of religion in bioethics, highlighting the need for critical discussions. During the congress, there was a strong push for incorporating religious values into bioethical discourse, raising questions about the validity and implications of such an approach. This paper examines the influence of religious thought on bioethical discussions, and the ongoing debate over the role of religious perspective…Read more
  •  22
    Human Brain Organoids and Stakeholders' Attitudes: Evidence, Gaps, and Governance
    with Kiichi Inarimori, Masanori Kataoka, Koji Ota, Julian Savulescu, and Tsutomu Sawai
    Trends in Biotechnology. 2026.
    We review 13 empirical studies examining attitudes toward human brain organoid (HBO) research. Stakeholders tend to emphasize practical concerns-worries about commercialization, reproductive cloning, informed consent, and uncertainty about consequences-rather than issues related to consciousness. Based on these findings, we identify three priority areas for future ethical and policy discussions.
  •  21
    Psychedelics are increasingly being studied and used in clinical and therapeutic contexts, prompting renewed ethical and regulatory debate. Claims of psychedelic exceptionalism—whether “negative,” portraying psychedelics as uniquely risky and thus requiring stricter oversight, or “positive,” portraying them as uniquely beneficial and thus exempt from ordinary ethical rules—have become common. In a recent article, we argued that while psychedelics may involve distinctive constellations of feature…Read more
  •  37
    The Enduring Promise of Personalising Patient Preference Prediction
    with Sebastian Porsdam Mann, Tessa van Veenendaal, Jemima Allen, Sabine Salloch, Karin Jongsma, Matthias Braun, Walter Sinnott-Armstrong, Julian Savulescu, David Wendler, and Annette Rid
    Neuroethics 19 (1): 17. 2026.
    The challenge of making healthcare decisions for incapacitated patients continues to confront stakeholders worldwide. Annette Rid and David Wendler proposed a Patient Preference Predictor (P3) that uses population-level data to infer an incapacitated patient’s likely treatment choices, with the aim of aligning care with the values and preferences they held when last autonomous. Some objectors claimed this would fail to respect patients’ (former) autonomy because the basis for prediction would no…Read more
  •  82
    Artificial intelligence, existential risk and equity: the need for multigenerational bioethics
    with Kyle Fiore Law and Stylianos Syropoulos
    Journal of Medical Ethics 50 (12): 799-801. 2024.
    > Future people count. There could be a lot of them. We can make their lives better. > > -- William MacAskill, What We Owe The Future > > [Longtermism is] quite possibly the most dangerous secular belief system in the world today. > > -- Émile P. Torres, Against Longtermism Philosophers,1 2 psychologists,3 4 politicians5 and even some tech billionaires6 have sounded the alarm about artificial intelligence (AI) and the dangers it may pose to the long-term future of humanity. Some believe it poses…Read more
  •  130
    The Hopkins-Oxford Psychedelics Ethics (HOPE) Working Group Consensus Statement
    with Edward Jacobs, Paul S. Appelbaum, Lori Bruce, Ksenia Cassidy, Yuria Celidwen, Katherine Cheung, Sean K. Clancy, Neşe Devenot, Jules Evans, Holly Fernandez Lynch, Phoebe Friesen, Albert Garcia Romeu, Neil Gehani, Molly Maloof, Olivia Marcus, Ole Martin Moen, Mayli Mertens, Sandeep M. Nayak, Tehseen Noorani, Kyle Patch, Sebastian Porsdam-Mann, Gokul Raj, Khaleel Rajwani, Keisha Ray, William Smith, Daniel Villiger, Neil Levy, Roger Crisp, and Julian Savulescu
    American Journal of Bioethics 24 (7). 2024.
  •  88
    Distinctive But Not Exceptional: The Risks of Psychedelic Ethical Exceptionalism
    with Katherine Cheung, Kyle Patch, and David B. Yaden
    American Journal of Bioethics 25 (1): 16-28. 2025.
    When used clinically, psychedelics may appear unusual or even unique when compared to more familiar or long-standing medical interventions, prompting some to suggest that the ethical issues raised may likewise be exceptional. If that is correct, then perhaps psychedelics should be treated differently from other medical substances: for example, by being subjected to different ethical or evidentiary standards. Alternatively, it may be that psychedelics have more in common with various existing med…Read more
  •  154
    A prominent critique of cognitive or athletic enhancement claims that certain performance‐improving drugs or technologies may ‘cheapen’ resulting achievements. Considerably less attention has been paid to the impact of enhancement on the value of moral achievements. Would the use of moral enhancement (bio)technologies, rather than (solely) ‘traditional’ means of moral development like schooling and socialization, cheapen the ‘achievement’ of morally improving oneself? We argue that, to the exten…Read more
  •  20
    Are Psychedelics Ethically Exceptional After All? Some Further Reflections
    with Katherine Cheung, Kyle Patch, and David B. Yaden
    American Journal of Bioethics 26 (5). 2026.
    We are grateful to those who commented on our Target Article on ethical exceptionalism around psychedelics (see Box 1 for a summary of our main points) and to Cohen and Marks (2025) for their compl...
  •  116
    Psychedelics beyond medicine: Treatment, enhancement, hype, consent, and the limits of medicalization
    with Mina Caraccio, Katherine Cheung, Sebastian Porsdam Mann, Lori Bruce, Edward Jacobs, Daniel Villiger, Julian Sandbrink, Christopher Register, Ivar R. Hannikainen, Mette Leonard Høeg, Sean Clancy, Khaleel Rajwani, Emma C. Gordon, Giovanni Spitale, Neil Levy, Keisha Ray, Yuria Celidwen, Ilina Singh, Julian Savulescu, and David Bryce Yaden
    Philosophical Psychology 38 (7): 3340-3383. 2025.
    The current revival of interest in classic psychedelics and other psychoactives such as ketamine and MDMA, coupled with changes to their regulatory status in many jurisdictions, necessitates rigorous ethical guidelines both within and beyond clinical and scientific contexts. This paper examines crucial ethical, philosophical, and policy considerations needed to ensure psychedelic use across various settings remains equitable, beneficial, consensual, and safe, with appropriate accountability mech…Read more
  •  31
    Data for dollars? The ethics of trading African health data for American investment: lessons from the US–Kenya deal
    with Keymanthri Moodley
    Journal of Medical Ethics 52 (3): 137-141. 2026.
    Recent news reports describe a multibillion dollar health cooperation agreement between the Kenyan government and the USA, under which access to ‘de-identified and aggregated’ data from Kenyan health systems would be provided to US researchers within a legally governed framework, alongside substantial US funding commitments for healthcare infrastructure and services that are needed in Kenya.1 The arrangement has been cast, by representatives of both governments, as reasonable, efficient and lega…Read more
  •  34
    The Sorrows of Young Chatbot Users: Harm and Responsibility in Human-AI Relationships
    with Cristina Voinea, Christopher Register, Sebastian Porsdam Mann, and Julian Savulescu
    Topoi 1-14. forthcoming.
    This paper argues that interactions with chatbots are a form of engaging with fictional characters; so, by comparing chatbots with novels and video games as mediums of fictional engagement, we can gain a clearer understanding of who, if anyone, is responsible when users’ interactions with chatbots lead to self-harm or harm to others. We explore the differences between novels, video games, and chatbots across four dimensions: the degree of creators’ control over the content and user experience, t…Read more
  •  44
    Seven Desiderata for Ethical Frameworks for AI Mental Health Agents
    with William R. Smith and Benjamin Buck
    American Journal of Bioethics 26 (2): 83-86. 2026.
    Volume 26, Issue 2, February 2026, Page 83-86.
  •  3
    Abolishing Gender
    In David Edmonds (ed.), Future Morality, Oxford University Press, Usa. pp. 35-49. 2021.
    This chapter evaluates the abolition of gender. There is a powerful set of assumptions in Western culture that influences how many of us think about sex and gender, even if we are not always fully aware of it. This set of assumptions can be called the “Dominant Gender Ideology” (DGI). Some people think it would better if sex was not linked to socially enforced gender roles that prescribe how people should be and behave on the basis of their sex. And their proposal for how to bring about this bet…Read more
  •  19
    Compared with high-income countries (HICs), developing ‘Chat-IRB’—application-specific large language models for research ethics review—may have different implications for resource-constrained Research Ethics Committees or Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). While certain concerns raised by Moodley, Malpani, and Reis—including resource challenges, reviewing research conducted in LMICs, and automation bias—are not entirely unique to LMIC IRBs, the hurdl…Read more
  •  39
    On 16 April 2025, the Supreme Court of the UK ruled that when interpreting the UK’s Equality Act (2010)—the Act of the UK Parliament that details protections against unlawful discrimination—the terms ‘man’, ‘woman’ and ‘sex’ pick out ‘biological sex’ (defined in the Court’s ruling as ‘the sex of a person at birth’) and not also ‘certificated sex’ (defined in the Court’s ruling as ‘the sex attained by the acquisition of a Gender Recognition Certificate’). Some have argued that the Court’s decisio…Read more
  •  60
    Background Toomey et al (2024) found that US participants were more likely to follow a medical treatment preference—expressed after substantial cognitive decline—of a third person rather than their own future self. This correlated with a greater tendency to see the third person as still their true self. We hypothesised that the greater epistemic access one has to one’s own true self as opposed to others might drive this difference. Methods A codebook designed to capture different kinds of eviden…Read more
  •  79
    Experimental Bioethics, Linguistic Pragmatism, and Public Attitudes Toward Brain Organoids Research
    with Faisal Feroz and Jonathan Lewis
    American Journal of Bioethics 25 (4): 71-74. 2025.
    We agree with Clapp et al. (2025) that the representational view of language presents an impoverished account of communicative speech acts. Empirical research shows how people’s conceptual inferenc...
  •  26
    Digital Life Models and the Genomic Knowledge Paradox: A Proposal for AI-Assisted Reflection in Genetic Decision-Making
    with Serene Ong, Sebastian Porsdam Mann, Cristina Voinea, Christopher Register, Julian Koplin, and Julian Savulescu
    American Journal of Bioethics 25 (12): 95-99. 2025.
    As genomic screening expands globally, individuals increasingly confront an epistemic challenge: they cannot know whether their future self will benefit from—or prefer versus regret having received...
  •  60
    “Let’s Build It and Find Out!” Next Steps for Personalized Patient Preference Prediction
    with Sebastian Porsdam Mann, Tessa van Veenendaal, Jemima Winifred Allen, Sabine Salloch, Karin Jongsma, Matthias Braun, Walter Sinnott-Armstrong, Annette Rid, David Wendler, and Julian Savulescu
    American Journal of Bioethics 26 (1): 1-6. 2026.
    In recent work, we introduced a Personalized Patient Preference Predictor (P4) that would make use of large language models (LLMs) trained on individual-specific data. The P4 would, if successfully...
  •  49
    As recently appointed co-editors-in-chief of the Journal of Medical Ethics, our goal is to serve the community of authors, reviewers and readers by ensuring that the work we publish is timely, rigorous and distinctive. In this editorial, we want to share a few notes about how we are approaching editorial decisions, so that our rationale is clear, and to call attention to some simplification of the journal’s article types and what we’re hoping for from work in each of these categories. First, som…Read more
  •  77
    Artificial intelligence (AI) agents such as chatbots and personal AI assistants are increasingly popular. These technologies raise new privacy concerns beyond those posed by other AI systems or information technologies. For example, anthropomorphic features of AI chatbots may invite users to disclose more information with these systems than they would otherwise, especially when users interact with chatbots in relationship-like ways. In this paper, we aim to develop a framework for assessing the …Read more
  •  48
    Healthcare systems often delegate surgical consent-seeking to members of the treating team other than the surgeon (e.g., junior doctors in the UK and Australia). Yet, little is known about public attitudes toward this practice compared to emerging AI-supported options. This first large-scale empirical study examines how laypeople evaluate the validity and liability risks of using an AI-supported surgical consent system (Consent-GPT). We randomly assigned 376 UK participants (demographically repr…Read more
  •  36
    Digital Psychological Twins in Medicine: Addressing Risks to Human Relationships
    with Tessa van Veenendaal, Sebastian Porsdam Mann, and Julian Savulescu
    In Yanto Chandra & Ruiping Fan (eds.), Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Human Relations: Eastern and Western Perspectives, Springer Nature Singapore. pp. 239-257. 2025.
    Medical decision-making on behalf of individuals who have lost the capacity to make their own treatment choices poses significant challenges. The “substituted judgment” standard, which prioritizes individual autonomy, requires surrogate decision-makers to choose the course of action that the patient would have chosen or endorsed if they were able to do so. However, research suggests that surrogates often face difficulties in accurately predicting patient preferences, even when making a good-fait…Read more
  •  71
    Proposals to create AI chatbots or conversational ‘agents’ modelled on real human individuals, including specific bioethics scholars1 in the academic context, or individual patients (or potential future patients) in the medical context,2 have taken off in recent years. This has been accompanied by a lively and sometimes heated discussion about the ethics of creating or deploying such person-emulating chatbots in various contexts, both within and beyond the healthcare domain. Currently debated qu…Read more