Columbia, South Carolina, United States of America
  •  137
    Hegel and the Spirit (review)
    The Owl of Minerva 26 (1): 71-77. 1994.
    In most of the philosophy of the last 150 years, theological concerns have been increasingly marginalized. This does not mean that the issues that were addressed theologically in the past are no longer addressed. Rather, the perennial concerns have been reconstructed so that they are no longer tied to a religious context. Ecclesiology has become political theory, moral theology has become ethics, and doctrines of revelation have become epistemology. Such a list could be made fairly exhaustive, a…Read more
  •  63
    Bioethics in a Liberal Society (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 30 (2): 124-125. 1998.
  •  74
    The scope of organizational ethics
    HEC Forum 10 (2): 127-135. 1998.
  •  135
    Many physicians assert that new cost-control mechanisms inappropriately interfere with clinical decision-making. They claim that high costs arise from poorly practiced medicine, and argue that effective utilization of resources is best promoted by advancing the scientific and ethical ideals of medicine. However, the claim is not warranted by empirical evidence. In this essay, I show how it rests upon aesthetic considerations associated with diagnostic elegance. I first consider scientific ration…Read more
  •  119
    The case for managed care: Reappraising medical and socio-political ideals
    Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 24 (5). 1999.
    The arguments against managed care can be divided into two general clusters. One cluster concerns the way managed care undermines the ethical ideals of medical professionalism. Since those ideals largely focus on the physician-patient relation, the first cluster comes under the rubric of micro-ethics; namely, the ethics of individual-individual relations. The second cluster of criticisms focuses on macro-ethical issues, primarily on issues of justice and policy. By reviewing these arguments, it …Read more
  •  130
    Open questions in the ethics of convergence
    Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 32 (3). 2007.
    After historically situating NBIC Convergence in the context of earlier bioethical debate on genetics, ten questions are raised in areas related to the ethics of Convergence, indicating where future research is needed.
  •  144
    Expanding the horizon of reflection on health and disease
    Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 20 (5): 461-473. 1995.
    Last updated - 2020-01-06.
  •  85
  •  84
    The ethics of nano/neuro convergence
    In Judy Illes & Barbara J. Sahakian (eds.), Oxford Handbook of Neuroethics, Oxford University Press. pp. 467--92. 2013.
    This article outlines a few representative areas of research in nano- and neuroscience and then considers the complex continuum of entangled research practices that results. The point of this review is to give a realistic sense of the distributed, opportunistic character of this research, and to show how such emergent practices challenge conventional assumptions about how ethics and science should be advanced. It evaluates the risk profile of research related to that type as if it designated som…Read more
  •  62
    A Sympathetic but Critical Assessment of Nanotechnology Initiatives
    with Robert Best and Robin Wilson
    Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 34 (4): 655-657. 2006.
  •  91
    Stem cells and the man on the moon: Should we go there from here?
    with Robert G. Best
    American Journal of Bioethics 2 (1). 2002.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  77
    This book is for those interested in an extensive review of the field of bioethics. It is for philosophers who wish to understand the core conceptual issues in health care ethics, and for bioethicists who wish to better understand classical problems in philosophy that have a bearing on health care ethics. The Handbook of Bioethics: Taking Stock of the Field from a Philosophical Perspective: -presents a comprehensive survey of bioethics in one volume; -has 27 of the most prominent scholars in the…Read more
  •  111
    Beware of mereologists bearing gifts: prolegomena to a medical metaphysics
    Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 34 (5): 385-408. 2013.
    This essay considers implications of formal mereologies and ontologies for medical metaphysics. Edward Fried’s extensional mereological account of the human body is taken as representative of a prominent strand in analytic metaphysics that has close affinities with medical positivism. I show why such accounts fail. First, I consider how Fried attempts to make sense of the medical case of Barney Clark, the first recipient of an artificial heart, and show that his analytic metaphysical categories …Read more
  •  62
    The two sides of inter-ethics
    HEC Forum 12 (3): 185-190. 2000.
  •  134
    An agenda for future debate on concepts of health and disease
    Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 10 (1): 19-27. 2007.
    The traditional contrast between naturalist and normativist disease concepts fails to capture the most salient features of the health concepts debate. By using health concepts as a window on background notions of medical science and ethics, I show how Christopher Boorse (an influential naturalist) and Lennart Nordenfelt (an influential normativist) actually share deep assumptions about the character of medicine. Their disease concepts attempt, in different ways, to shore up the same medical mode…Read more