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25The Social Situation of Sincerity: Austen's Emma and Lovibond's Ethical FormationIn Sandra Lee Bartky, Paul Benson, Sue Campbell, Claudia Card, Robin S. Dillon, Jean Harvey, Karen Jones, Charles W. Mills, James Lindemann Nelson, Margaret Urban Walker, Rebecca Whisnant & Catherine Wilson (eds.), Moral Psychology: Feminist Ethics and Social Theory, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. 2004.
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34Fluid Families: The Role of ChildrenIn Hilde Lindemann (ed.), Feminism and Families, Routledge. 1997.
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1Constructing Feelings: Jane Austen and Naomi Scheman on the Moral Role of EmotionsIn Peggy Desautels, Joanne Waugh, Margaret Urban Walker, Uma Narayan, Diana Tietjens Meyers & Hilde Lindemann Nelson (eds.), Feminists Doing Ethics, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. 2001.
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Fluid families: The role of children in custody arrangementsIn Hilde Lindemann (ed.), Feminism and Families, Routledge. 1997.
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26Semantic Externalism: A Rough Sketch and a Gesture at Motivation The 1960s and 70s saw the development of a picture of reference in which the link between the speaker and the spoken of was provided not, or not solely, by beliefs entertained by the speaker but by causal, historical, and social relationships extending among the speaker and other members of (review)In Eva Feder Kittay & Licia Carlson (eds.), Cognitive Disability and its Challenge to Moral Philosophy, Wiley-blackwell. 2010.
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78Parental obligations and the ethics of surrogacy: a causal perspectivePublic Affairs Quarterly 5 (1): 49-61. 1991.
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50Carl Schneider’s The Practice of Autonomy: A PrécisJournal of Clinical Ethics 13 (1): 54-56. 2002.
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52Brain Trauma and Surrogate Decision Making: Dogmas, Challenges, and ResponseJournal of Clinical Ethics 15 (4): 264-276. 2004.
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63Trusting Families: Responding to Mary Ann Meeker, “Responsive Care Management: Family Decision Makers in Advanced Cancer”Journal of Clinical Ethics 22 (2): 123-127. 2011.Mary Ann Meeker’s article admirably reminds readers that family members are involved in—or “responsively manage”—the care of relatives with severe illness in ways that run considerably beyond the stereotypes at play in many bioethical discussions of advance directives. Her observations thus make thinking about the role of families in healthcare provision more adequate to the facts, and this is an important contribution. There’s reason to be worried, however, that one explicit aim of the article—…Read more
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145Forming Professional Bioethicists: The Program at the University of Tennessee, KnoxvilleCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 9 (3): 418-423. 2000.As a way of contributing to bioethics' understanding of itself, and, more particularly, to invigorate conversation about how we can best educate future colleagues, we present here a sketch of the quarter-century-old graduate concentration in medical ethics housed in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Our hope is to incite other programs to share their histories, strategies, problems, and aspirations, so as to help the field as a whole get a clearer sense of h…Read more
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166Hurts, insults and stigmas: a comment on MurphyJournal of Medical Ethics 37 (2): 66-67. 2011.Both of the main points in Professor Murphy's paper seem to me clearly and effectively argued.1 It is incontrovertible that some people find hurtful the use of medical technologies to avoid the birth of children who, in the present order of things, would be disabled. No result from the philosophy of language, or anywhere else for that matter, can plausibly show otherwise. Indeed, even to speak of ‘legitimately interpreting’ events that cause one pain as ‘hurtful’, as Murphy does, seems a shade t…Read more
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54Book reviews: Morality and our complicated form of life: Feminist Wittgensteinian metaethics. By Peg O'Connor (review)Hypatia 25 (1): 242-244. 2010.
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36“Yet the Body Is His Book”: Plastinated Bodies and the Book of Common BioethicsHastings Center Report 43 (3): 46-47. 2013.John Donne, poet laureate of the human body, was much troubled by its fate. Scorning Plato's picture of the body as the soul's prison, Donne imagined souls as leaving their bodies reluctantly and as yearning to return to the very one from which they had departed. In poems like “The Ecstasy,” he depicts the union of lovers’ souls, hints at a similar love of souls for bodies, and suggests that it is through the body—“his book”—that the lover comes to know love's spiritual mysteries. John Lantos al…Read more
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73Moral Teachings from Unexpected Quarters: Lessons for Bioethics from the Social Sciences and Managed CareHastings Center Report 30 (1): 12-17. 2000.On the usual account of moral reasoning, social science is often seen as able to provide “just the facts,” while philosophy attends to moral values and conceptual clarity and builds formally valid arguments. Yet disciplines are informed by epistemic values—and bioethics might do well to see social scientific practices and their attendant normative understandings about what is humanly important as a significant part of ethics generally.
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70Taking Families SeriouslyHastings Center Report 22 (4): 6-12. 1992.Medical decisionmaking would be a messier but better thing if it honored what is morally valuable about patients' families. The concerns of intimates have a legitimate call upon us even when we are ill.
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43Transplantation through a Glass DarklyHastings Center Report 22 (5): 6-8. 1992.Should baboons become spare parts bins for human beings? Not when their moral nature remains a mystery to us.
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102Still Quiet After All These Years: Revisiting “The Silence of the Bioethicists”Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 9 (3): 249-259. 2012.Some 14 years ago, I published an article in which I identified a prime site for bioethicists to ply their trade: medical responses to requests for hormonal and surgical interventions aimed at facilitating transgendered people’s transition to their desired genders. Deep issues about the impact of biotechnologies and health care practices on central aspects of our conceptual system, I argued, were raised by how doctors understood and responded to people seeking medical assistance in changing thei…Read more
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157Health and Disease as 'Thick' Concepts in Ecosystemic ContextsEnvironmental Values 4 (4). 1995.In this paper, I consider what kind of normative work might be done by speaking of ecosystems utilising a 'medical' vocabulary – drawing, that is, on such notions as 'health', 'disease', and 'illness'. Some writers attracted to this mode of expression have been rather modest about what they think it might purchase. I wish to be bolder. Drawing on the idea of 'thick' evaluative concepts as discussed by McDowell, Williams and Taylor, and resorting to a phenomenological argument for a kind of moral…Read more
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The opacity of consent: Richard Hull on informed consent as patient dutyIn Elizabeth D. Boepple (ed.), Sui generis: essays presented to Richard Thompson Hull on the occasion of his sixty-fifth birthday, Authorhouse. 2005.
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101Internal organs, integral selves, and good communities: opt-out organ procurement policies and the 'separateness of persons'Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 32 (5): 289-300. 2011.Most people accept that if they can save someone from death at very little cost to themselves, they must do so; call this the ‘duty of easy rescue.’ At least for many such people, an instance of this duty is to allow their vital organs to be used for transplantation. Accordingly, ‘opt-out’ organ procurement policies, based on a powerfully motivated responsibility to render costless or very low-cost lifesaving aid, would seem presumptively permissible. Counterarguments abound. Here I consider, in…Read more
East Lansing, Michigan, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Applied Ethics |
| Meta-Ethics |
| Philosophy of Gender, Race, and Sexuality |
Areas of Interest
| Philosophy of Language |
| Normative Ethics |
| Philosophy of Gender, Race, and Sexuality |