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106`Watching' medicine: Do bioethicists respect patients' privacy?Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 21 (6): 537-552. 2000.Agich has identified `watching' – the formal orinformal observation of the medical setting – as oneof the four main roles of the clinical bioethicist. By an analysis of a case study involving a bioethicsstudent who engaged in watching at an HIV/AIDS clinicas part of his training, I raise questions about theethical justification of watching. I argue that theinvasion of privacy that watching entails makes theactivity unacceptable unless the watcher has receivedprior consent from the patients who a…Read more
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357Hume’s Reflections on the Identity and Simplicity of MindPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 62 (3): 557-578. 2001.The article presents a new interpretation of Hume’s treatment of personal identity, and his later rejection of it in the “Appendix” to the Treatise. Hume’s project, on this interpretation, is to explain beliefs about persons that arise primarily within philosophical projects, not in everyday life. The belief in the identity and simplicity of the mind as a bundle of perceptions is an abstruse belief, not one held by the “vulgar” who rarely turn their minds on themselves so as to think of their pe…Read more
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214Bioethics and the problem of pluralismSocial Philosophy and Policy 19 (2): 1-28. 2002.The state that we inhabit plays a significant role in shaping our lives. For not only do its institutions constrain the kinds of lives we can lead, but it also claims the right to punish us if our choices take us beyond what it deems to be appropriate limits. Political philosophers have traditionally tried to justify the state's power by appealing to their preferred theories of justice, as articulated in complex and wide-ranging moral theories—utilitarianism, Kantianism, and the like. One of Joh…Read more
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3Hume's scepticism and ancient scepticismsIn Jon Miller & Brad Inwood (eds.), Hellenistic and Early Modern Philosophy, Cambridge University Press. pp. 255--60. 2003.
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125Character traits and the Humean approach to ethicsPoznan Studies in the Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities 94 (1): 79-110. 2007.
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194Freedom and Moral Sentiment: Hume’s Way of Naturalizing ResponsibilityPhilosophical Review 106 (4): 596. 1997.Among the most serious objections to naturalism in ethics is that it fails to account for human freedom. By investigating morality from a scientific perspective, this objection runs, we lose sight of how we are not merely caused to act by whatever complex of desires happens to be preponderant at a particular moment, of how we are able to determine for ourselves a particular course of action. Moreover, since it is only in virtue of this capacity of self-determination that we can be held responsib…Read more
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101Feminists Rethink the SelfPhilosophical Review 108 (1): 110. 1999.The idea that the self is in need of rethinking, as the title to this collection of essays suggests, presupposes that the self has already been “thought.” And indeed it has—both explicitly, by philosophers, and implicitly, in the practices of everyday life. For philosophers, this thinking about the self has taken place largely in abstract terms; persons have been treated as metaphysical-cum-moral subjects, disembodied minds that could plausibly be split from or melded with other such minds, or a…Read more
Areas of Specialization
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy, Miscellaneous |
| Biomedical Ethics |