Chicago, Illinois, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Applied Ethics
Normative Ethics
Areas of Interest
Applied Ethics
Normative Ethics
  •  59
    Managed Care and the New Medical Paternalism
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 6 (4): 324-326. 1995.
  •  267
    Death, Dignity, and the Theory of Value
    Ethical Perspectives 9 (2): 103-130. 2002.
    The word ‘dignity’ arises continuously in the debate over euthanasia and assisted suicide, both in Europe and in North America. Unlike the phrases ‘autonomy’ and ‘slippery slope’, ‘dignity’ is used by those on both sides of the question. For example, the organizations most prominently associated with the campaign that culminated in the recent legalization of euthanasia in Belgium are the Association pour la Droit de Mourir dans la Dignité and Recht op Waardig Sterven. Yet when Belgium passed its…Read more
  •  167
    Catholic Health Care: Not Dead Yet
    The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 1 (1): 41-50. 2001.
  •  35
    8. Who Owns the Human Genome?
    In Daniel Monsour (ed.), Ethics & the New Genetics: An Integrated Approach, University of Toronto Press. pp. 123-133. 2007.
  •  231
    “Reinventing” the rule of double effect
    In Bonnie Steinbock (ed.), The Oxford handbook of bioethics, Oxford University Press. pp. 114--49. 2007.
    The Rule of Double Effect has played an important role in bioethics, especially during the last fifty years. Its major application in bioethics has been in providing physicians who are opposed to euthanasia with a moral justification for using opioid analgesics in treating the pain of patients whose death might thereby be hastened. It has also prominently been applied to certain obstetric cases. The scope of application of double effect is actually much broader than medical ethics, extending to …Read more
  •  95
    Futility and the varieties of medical judgment
    Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 18 (1-2): 63-78. 1997.
    Pellegrino has argued that end-of-life decisions should be based upon the physician's assessment of the effectiveness of the treatment and the patient's assessment of its benefits and burdens. This would seem to imply that conditions for medical futility could be met either if there were a judgment of ineffectiveness, or if the patient were in a state in which he or she were incapable of a subjective judgment of the benefits and burdens of the treatment. I argue that a theory of futility accordi…Read more