•  79
    Inerrancy and Worldview: Answering Modern Challenges to the Bible (review)
    Philosophia Christi 16 (1): 230-233. 2014.
  •  61
    Do You Have a “Syndrome” If You Have a Flat-Shaped Head?
    Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 43 (4): 369-380. 2018.
    The themes of this issue—which include the meaning of our health and disease concepts, the so-called “medical gaze” and its embedded power relations, and the epistemic value of mixing therapy with research—are introduced by reflecting on a case about an infant girl whose head is observed to be somewhat flat.
  •  59
    Free will in philosophical theology (review)
    Philosophia Christi 17 (2): 495-498. 2015.
  •  2180
    How (not) to think of the ‘dead-donor’ rule
    Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 39 (1): 1-25. 2018.
    Although much has been written on the dead-donor rule in the last twenty-five years, scant attention has been paid to how it should be formulated, what its rationale is, and why it was accepted. The DDR can be formulated in terms of either a Don’t Kill rule or a Death Requirement, the former being historically rooted in absolutist ethics and the latter in a prudential policy aimed at securing trust in the transplant enterprise. I contend that the moral core of the rule is the Don’t Kill rule, no…Read more
  •  913
    ‘Total disability’ and the wrongness of killing
    Journal of Medical Ethics 41 (8): 661-662. 2015.
    Walter Sinnott-Armstrong and Franklin G Miller recently argued that the wrongness of killing is best explained by the harm that comes to the victim, and that ‘total disability’ best explains the nature of this harm. Hence, killing patients who are already totally disabled is not wrong. I maintain that their notion of total disability is ambiguous and that they beg the question with respect to whether there are abilities left over that remain relevant for the goods of personhood and human worth.…Read more