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Christian Perring

St. John's University
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    60
    • Most Recent
    • Most Downloaded
    • Topics
  •  Events
    1
  •  News and Updates
    48

 More details
  • St. John's University
    Adjunct Full Professor (Part-time)
Princeton University
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1996
Homepage
New York, NY, United States of America
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Action
Philosophy of Gender, Race, and Sexuality
Cognitive Sciences
Social and Political Philosophy
Philosophy of Law
Normative Ethics
Meta-Ethics
Applied Ethics
Philosophy of Mind
Value Theory, Miscellaneous
5 more
  • All publications (60)
  •  80
    Against Scientism, For Personhood
    American Journal of Bioethics 7 (1): 67-68. 2007.
    No abstract
    Biomedical Ethics
  •  67
    Havi Carel, Illness (review)
    Philosophy in Review 30 (1): 14-15. 2010.
    PoststructuralismFrench PhilosophyMental Illness
  •  81
    Ethics on the brain
    The Philosophers' Magazine 13 50-51. 2001.
  •  99
    Direct, fully intentional self-deception is also real
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 20 (1): 123-124. 1997.
    An important way to become self-deceived, omitted by Mele, is by intentionally ignoring and avoiding the contemplation of evidence one has for an upsetting conclusion, knowing full well that one is giving priority to one's present peace of mind over the search for truth. Such intentional self-deception may be especially hard to observe scientifically.
    Philosophy of Cognitive Science
  •  2
    TM Scanlon, Moral Dimensions: Permissibility, Meaning, Blame
    Philosophy in Review 29 (4): 281. 2009.
    The Doctrine of Double Effect
  •  77
    Rae Langton , Sexual Solipsism: Philosophical Essays on Pornography and Objectification (review)
    Philosophy in Review 31 (4): 287-289. 2011.
    PornographyFeminism: Pornography
  •  62
    Claudia Card , Confronting Evils: Terrorism, Torture, Genocide . Reviewed by
    Philosophy in Review 32 (4): 247-248. 2012.
    Torture
  •  127
    Medicating Children: The Case of Ritalin
    Bioethics 11 (3-4): 228-240. 1997.
    In response to recent concerns about the overmedication of children, this paper considers ethical and conceptual issues that arise in the issue of when children who are diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder should be given stimulants such as the psychotropic drug Ritalin as part of their treatment. There is considerable resistance and worry about the possibility of overmedication. This is linked to the worry that the diagnosis of ADHD is overused, and the paper considers some r…Read more
    In response to recent concerns about the overmedication of children, this paper considers ethical and conceptual issues that arise in the issue of when children who are diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder should be given stimulants such as the psychotropic drug Ritalin as part of their treatment. There is considerable resistance and worry about the possibility of overmedication. This is linked to the worry that the diagnosis of ADHD is overused, and the paper considers some reasons to worry about the overuse of the diagnosis itself. The paper then focuses on the resistance to the use of drugs, which is particularly strong for children in the gray area of diagnosis, where it is dubious whether the children really meet the strict diagnostic criteria. The reasons behind such resistance are often not well articulated, so part of the task of the paper is spell out what they might be. The reasons are given the following labels: side effects, unnaturalness, profit motives, thought control, competitiveness, and doctors' power. The paper ends in taking the polemical position that while there is some legitimate concern about possible short and long term side effects of children taking psychotropic drugs, the other reasons for resistance are not well‐founded.
    Biomedical EthicsMental Disorders
  •  45
    Are Models Irrelevant and Incoherent?
    Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 21 (3): 199-201. 2014.
    Mental Disorders, MiscMental IllnessPhilosophy of Psychiatry and Psychopathology, Misc
  • George Ainslie, Breakdown of Will (review)
    Philosophy in Review 22 235-237. 2002.
  •  15
    Disorders of Childhood and Youth
    In Jennifer Radden (ed.), The Philosophy of Psychiatry: A Companion, Oxford University Press. pp. 147. 2004.
    Ethics
  •  65
    Walter Sinnott-Armstrong, ed., Moral Psychology (vol. 3). The Neuroscience of Morality: Emotion, Brain Disorders, and Development. Reviewed by (review)
    Philosophy in Review 30 (4): 301-304. 2010.
    Ethics
  •  28
    Derek Bolton, What is Mental Disorder? An Essay in Philosophy, Science, and Values Reviewed by
    Philosophy in Review 29 (5): 318-320. 2009.
    Science and ValuesMental Disorders
  •  74
    The neuron doctrine in psychiatry
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 22 (5): 846-847. 1999.
    Gold & Stoljar's target article is important because it shows the limitations of neurobiological theories of the mind more powerfully than previous philosophical criticisms, especially those that focus on the subjective nature of experience and those that use considerations from philosophy of language to argue for the holism of the mental. They use less controversial assumptions and clearer arguments, the conclusions of which are applicable to the whole of neuroscience. Their conclusions can be …Read more
    Gold & Stoljar's target article is important because it shows the limitations of neurobiological theories of the mind more powerfully than previous philosophical criticisms, especially those that focus on the subjective nature of experience and those that use considerations from philosophy of language to argue for the holism of the mental. They use less controversial assumptions and clearer arguments, the conclusions of which are applicable to the whole of neuroscience. Their conclusions can be applied to psychiatry to argue that, contrary to many researchers' assumptions, the approaches to both understanding and treating mental disorders must be interdisciplinary.
    Reduction in Cognitive ScienceExplanation in Neuroscience
  • Philosophical Practice (review)
    Journal of Mind and Behavior 23 (3): 321-324. 2002.
    Lou Marinoff's Philosophical Practice outlines the rise of the new profession of philosophical practice and argues that philosophy should aim to be more applicable to issues people face in their everyday lives. Marinoff is the President of the American Philosophical Practitioners Association, and author of Plato Not Prozac, and he has arguably managed to draw more attention to philosophical counseling than any other person in America
    Philosophy of Psychology
  •  1
    Andrew Stark, The Limits of Medicine
    Philosophy in Review 27 (3): 227. 2007.
  •  44
    Indeterminacy and resentment
    Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 17 (3): 263-264. 2010.
    IndeterminacyEmotionsMental IllnessPhilosophy of Psychiatry and Psychopathology, MiscExplanation in …Read more
    IndeterminacyEmotionsMental IllnessPhilosophy of Psychiatry and Psychopathology, MiscExplanation in Cognitive Science
  •  113
    Essential Philosophy of Psychiatry, by Tim Thornton (review)
    Mind 118 (471): 882-886. 2009.
    Philosophy of Psychiatry and Psychopathology, MiscPsychiatric EthicsMental IllnessPsychiatric Taxono…Read more
    Philosophy of Psychiatry and Psychopathology, MiscPsychiatric EthicsMental IllnessPsychiatric TaxonomyEvidence and KnowledgeMedical EpistemologyThe Concept of Disease
  •  3
    Divided Minds and Successive Selves: Ethical Issues in Disorders of Identity and Personality (review)
    Journal of Mind and Behavior 19 (1): 91-102. 1998.
    Exactly when Philosophy of Psychiatry started as a subfield of Philosophy is hard to say. There are several different estimates of how old psychiatry itself is, from one hundred to three hundred years, and of course there has been discussion and treatment of mental illness for at least a couple of thousand years. A host of issues which could count as belonging to the field have been discussed just within the last hundred years. For instance, a large literature on the philosophy of psychoanalysis…Read more
    Exactly when Philosophy of Psychiatry started as a subfield of Philosophy is hard to say. There are several different estimates of how old psychiatry itself is, from one hundred to three hundred years, and of course there has been discussion and treatment of mental illness for at least a couple of thousand years. A host of issues which could count as belonging to the field have been discussed just within the last hundred years. For instance, a large literature on the philosophy of psychoanalysis dates back to the beginning of the century, and in the last thirty years there has been discussion of amnesia and multiple personality in the philosophy of mind, bioethical debate about involuntary hospitalization and the ability of the mentally ill to give informed consent to drug trials, and recent continental philosophy has shown much interest in madness, civilization, capitalism and schizophrenia. However, I suggest that Philosophy of Psychiatry reached a sense of itself as a separate field only in the 1990s. In this time, it has gained its own association, journal, and a book series with a prestigious press. I refer to the American Association for Philosophy and Psychiatry, the associated journal, Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology, and the MIT Press series, Philosophical Psychopathology: Disorders of Mind, edited by Owen Flanagan and George Graham. Jennifer Radden's Divided Minds and Successive Selves is the first book in that series
  •  1
    Telling the truth about mental illness: the role of narrative
    In Nancy Potter (ed.), Trauma, Truth and Reconciliation: Healing damaged relationships, Oxford University Press. 2006.
    Mental Disorders
  •  89
    Review of Allan V. Horwitz, Creating Mental Illness (review)
    American Journal of Bioethics 4 (2): 70-72. 2004.
    Biomedical EthicsMental Illness
  • Cressida J. Heyes, Self-Transformations: Foucault, Ethics, and Normalized Bodies Reviewed by
    Philosophy in Review 28 (4): 267-269. 2008.
  •  85
    Mental illness
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2008.
    Mental Illness
  •  109
    A new world awaits
    with William Wilcox
    The Philosophers' Magazine 16 31-32. 2001.
    Value Theory, Miscellaneous
  •  88
    Getting Hooked
    The Philosophers' Magazine 11 60-60. 2000.
  •  171
    Degrees of Personhood
    Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 22 (2): 173-197. 1997.
    In this paper I argue that a Naturalist conception of personhood, such as the one defended by Derek Parfit, implies that there are degrees of personhood, i.e., that it makes sense to say one individual has a greater degree of personhood than another. I describe both criteria of general personhood, which distinguish between persons and non-persons, and criteria of particular personhood, which distinguish between one person and another. I examine some of the consequences for ethics, including the …Read more
    In this paper I argue that a Naturalist conception of personhood, such as the one defended by Derek Parfit, implies that there are degrees of personhood, i.e., that it makes sense to say one individual has a greater degree of personhood than another. I describe both criteria of general personhood, which distinguish between persons and non-persons, and criteria of particular personhood, which distinguish between one person and another. I examine some of the consequences for ethics, including the rights to life, self-determination, and treatment. There may be circumstances in medicine where we have to judge the value of a patient's life in order to decide what medical treatment, if any, to provide, and although it may be emotionally difficult and politically dangerous, one relevant factor is what degree of personhood that individual has
    Biomedical Ethics
  •  32
    Diagnostic Dilemmas in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry: Philosophical Perspectives (edited book)
    with Lloyd Wells
    Oxford University Press. 2014.
    Within child and adolescent psychiatry, there are a number of potential dilemmas pertaining to diagnosis, treatment, the protection of the child, as well as the child's own developing intelligence and moral judgement. Diagnostic Dilemmas in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry is the first in the IPPP series to explore this highly complex topic
    Ethics
  •  129
    The Place of Moral Responsibility and Mental Illness
    American Journal of Bioethics 9 (9): 32-33. 2009.
    Psychopathology and ResponsibilityMental IllnessPsychiatric Ethics
  •  93
    Problems With Non-Naturalistic Accounts of Non-Voluntariness
    Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 22 (1): 17-19. 2015.
    The debate in philosophy of science in the twentieth century over the theory-laden-ness of observation showed both that there are many ways in which scientific observation depends on theory, and also highlighted some ways in which it is blind to theoretical assumptions. Debates in the philosophy of medicine have shown how concepts and theories of illness are value-laden, especially in psychiatry. Kious in his helpful and stimulating target article argues that the mainstream approach to autonomy …Read more
    The debate in philosophy of science in the twentieth century over the theory-laden-ness of observation showed both that there are many ways in which scientific observation depends on theory, and also highlighted some ways in which it is blind to theoretical assumptions. Debates in the philosophy of medicine have shown how concepts and theories of illness are value-laden, especially in psychiatry. Kious in his helpful and stimulating target article argues that the mainstream approach to autonomy depends on assumptions about value, and this conclusion is surely correct. However, his focus on the concept of non-voluntariness is problematic, as I argue, and we are better off not seeing it as laden with.
    Autonomy and Moral PsychologyMental IllnessPhilosophy of Psychiatry and Psychopathology, Misc
  •  103
    Bad science?
    The Philosophers' Magazine 18 56-56. 2002.
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