Luís Cordeiro-Rodrigues

Hunan University
  •  14
    Introduction to the symposium on Chandran Kukathas’s Immigration and Freedom
    with Jinyu Sun
    Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy. forthcoming.
    This introduction to the book symposium on Chandran Kukathas’s Immigration and Freedom situates the book within contemporary debates on immigration and political freedom. It outlines Kukathas’s central argument that immigration controls do not merely affect immigrants but impose surveillance and policing on citizens, eroding the spirit of a free society. The introduction also provides an overview of the four commentaries and summarises Kukathas’s reply.
  •  8
    The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated health resource scarcity in many countries. Due to the shortage of medical equipment, some health workers in Zimbabwe refused to provide health services until these needs were addressed. In this article, we analyse the case of withdrawal of services by health workers in Zimbabwe and contend that they were morally justified in doing this. To forward this thesis, we try for the first time to use the African values of partiality and social harmony to evaluate t…Read more
  •  8
    The moral standing of combatants is a fundamental question in jus in bello: do combatants have the same moral standing in battle, irrespective of the side for which they are fighting? While the Zhuangzi does not explicitly address this question, it offers useful philosophical resources for addressing it. The Zhuangzian view contends that although, in principle, just cause would imply that combatants’ moral standing is unequal, they should nonetheless be treated equally in view of the manipulatio…Read more
  •  8
    This piece defends an integrative medicine approach to Medical AI, grounded in a Daoist perspective. Specifically, it draws on the Daoist classic Zhuangzi to argue that algorithms in medical AI should not be restricted to offering diagnoses and treatments from a Western medical perspective alone. Instead, medical AI should be prepared to provide patients with various forms of alternative medicine (such as Chinese medicine). This can significantly benefit public health and address the healthcare …Read more
  •  20
    This piece defends an integrative medicine approach to Medical AI, grounded in a Daoist perspective. Specifically, it draws on the Daoist classic _Zhuangzi_ to argue that algorithms in medical AI should not be restricted to offering diagnoses and treatments from a Western medical perspective alone. Instead, medical AI should be prepared to provide patients with various forms of alternative medicine (such as Chinese medicine). This can significantly benefit public health and address the healthcar…Read more
  •  3
    Digitalising Africa Is Critical for the Health of LGBTQ+ Persons
    with Chimaraoke Izugbara and Cornelius Ewuoso
    Developing World Bioethics. forthcoming.
    Developing World Bioethics, EarlyView.
  •  26
    In this article, I argue from a Zhuangzian point of view in favour of using virtual reality to enhance athletes’ morality. I argue that the Zhuangzi implies that (a) transformation is an everyday fact of life, (b) human beings have a limited perspective of reality, and (c) this perspective can be enriched by combining one’s view of the world with others’ views of the world. In turn, I use these arguments to contend that technological moral enhancement with virtual reality in sports is morally ju…Read more
  •  24
    In this article, I argue from a Zhuangzian point of view in favour of using virtual reality to enhance athletes’ morality. I argue that the Zhuangzi implies that (a) transformation is an everyday fact of life, (b) human beings have a limited perspective of reality, and (c) this perspective can be enriched by combining one’s view of the world with others’ views of the world. In turn, I use these arguments to contend that technological moral enhancement with virtual reality in sports is morally ju…Read more
  •  26
    Euthanasia in light of Epicurean ethics and metaphysics
    Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 47 (2): 135-139. 2026.
  •  24
    Some philosophers who are sceptical about the value of culture have contended that cultural practices that involve animal cruelty are not morally justified. To forward this position, these philosophers offer arguments grounded in intuition, harm, comparative weight and equality. They contend that cultural practices involving animal harm can be shown to be morally wrong simply by relying on a weak perspective that we should not harm others unnecessarily. In this article, I argue that this weak pe…Read more
  •  19
    Minority Cultural Rights and Bullfighting in a Portuguese Context
    Society and Animals 28 (4): 377-394. 2020.
    A topic in contemporary political philosophy that has received substantial attention recently is whether minorities have the right to mistreat nonhuman animals. Mostly the debate is focused on minority practices in the West, such as Muslim religious slaughtering. However, other minority contexts, especially Iberian ones, have been largely ignored. In this article, I place the Portuguese case study at the center of political philosophy debates and assess whether this cultural practice ought to be…Read more
  •  23
    Should transgender individuals serve in the armed forces? 1
    Ethics and Global Politics. forthcoming.
    Transgender individuals have systematically been discriminated against in military service, and although they have been included since 2016, a new White House executive order aims to exclude them again. In this paper, I analyse the arguments present in this executive order and argue that there are no good reasons to exclude transgender individuals from the military.
  •  15
    Book Review of Moral Partiality by Yong Li (review)
    Journal of Value Inquiry 1-3. forthcoming.
  •  55
    Digital technology can improve individuals’ lives substantially. Nonetheless, not everyone has access to it. This fact poses the question: is there an obligation to enable access to digital technology for everyone? We respond to this question affirmatively in this article, taking a Zhuangzian point of view. Particularly, we uphold that from a Zhuangzian viewpoint, we have duties towards everyone who shares the same nature; resultantly, there is an obligation beyond borders to bring digital techn…Read more
  •  31
    Finding the Right Rhetoric About Genital Modifications: Why Not Use Ubuntu?
    American Journal of Bioethics 25 (7): 120-122. 2025.
    In a recent article entitled “Genital Modifications in Prepubescent Minors: When May Clinicians Ethically Proceed?” published in the American Journal of Bioethics, the Brussels Collaboration on Bod...
  •  68
    Is conscription morally justified today?
    Ethics and Global Politics. forthcoming.
    European politicians have recently considered reintroducing conscription and have offered three main reasons for this, arguing that conscription is critical for (1) military readiness and deterrence, (2) respecting the social contract citizens have with their state, and (3) teaching civic values and patriotism. This article analyses these arguments and shows that they are false. While these arguments may have succeeded historically, warfare, conscription, and societies have changed, weakening th…Read more
  •  26
    Angolan Political Thought introduces anticolonial thinkers whose writings on colonialism and liberation have been instrumental in the formation of Angolan identity. It focuses on the political nature of these thinkers and how their work has impacted Angolan political reality. Luís Cordeiro-Rodrigues both introduces and critically analyzes the thought of Queen Njinga, Mário Pinto de Andrade, Agostinho Neto and Pepetela and systematically addresses five important topics in Angolan political thou…Read more
  •  48
    Are the existence of God and evil logically compatible? Philosophers have been dwelling on this question since the era of Ancient Greek philosophy. Most responses to this philosophical problem have come from a Western viewpoint. This article aims to answer this question by considering an African cosmological and ethical groundwork. Working conceptually within this cosmology and ethic, we argue that if the evil in the world is understood as a lesser evil, then a good God can plausibly allow evil …Read more
  •  96
    An Afro-Communitarian Relational Theory of AI'S Moral Status
    with Jiawei Xu
    American Philosophical Quarterly 62 (2): 173-189. 2025.
    The rapid development of AI in recent years has brought the problem of AI's moral status to the fore. In this article, we combine Afro-communitarian ethics with a cognitive perspective and argue that some AI can hold a moral status to the extent that it can be both a subject and an object of communion. Further, different kinds of AI have different degrees of moral status, depending on their communal capacities. To demonstrate this, we show that AI can engage in moral behavior and be morally disp…Read more
  •  82
    The Instrumentalization of Public Health Issues for Propaganda by the Far-Right
    with D. Landon Cole and D. Duan
    Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 22 (2): 321-326. 2025.
    Political opportunism of the far-right threatens the efficacy of public health policies and political stability in general. In this commentary, we outline some of the ways that the European far-right has misused public health concerns as propaganda tools. This is a significant threat to the goals of making health and science more inclusive, and we recommend some policies for mitigating the racist effect of the far-right. Notably, we recommend (a) transparency in health policies and robust implem…Read more
  •  67
    The Portuguese elections occurred this March, and the left’s decline has accompanied the far-right’s growth, as in previous elections. Explanations for such phenomena are often carried out using quantitative and qualitative methods. Philosophical conceptual analysis, in contrast, is frequently dismissed as a method for analysing political change. In this paper, I will show how, by using conceptual analysis, it is possible to assist in explaining voting behaviour from the left on the far-right pa…Read more
  •  151
    In Africa, homosexuality is routinely understood as a form of immoral behaviour. This has great implications for the physical and psychological well-being of homosexuals in Africa. One of the reasons why homosexuals are sometimes understood to be behaving immorally is because it is believed that same-sex relations are unnatural. I think that this conception of unnatural is grounded on the perverted faculty argument, although this is not often expressed in such terms. In this article, I will deve…Read more
  •  88
    A Relational View of Homosexuality
    The Monist 107 (3): 251-263. 2024.
    Homosexuality is criminalised and socially condemned in many places in Africa. This fact seems to suggest that African moral philosophy would likely render homosexuality immoral. Indeed, some of the African philosophical literature tries to suggest that homosexuality is morally wrong. Contrasting with this view, in this article, I will show that Afro-communitarian ethics implies that homosexuality is morally permissible and, indeed, can be an excellent way to promote social harmony. I defend thi…Read more
  •  69
    Colonial and Neocolonial Barriers to Companion Digital Humans in Africa
    Hastings Center Report 54 (3): 59-59. 2024.
    This letter responds to the essay “Digital Humans to Combat Loneliness and Social Isolation: Ethics Concerns and Policy Recommendation,” by Nancy S. Jecker, Robert Sparrow, Zohar Lederman, and Anita Ho, in the January‐February 2024 issue of the Hastings Center Report.
  •  85
    Jiren(畸人): Daoism, healthcare and atypical bodies
    with Qian Zhang, Lei Pang, and Zhibin Chen
    Journal of Medical Ethics 50 (11): 794-795. 2024.
    Jiren (畸人), literally translated as irregular (Ji) person (ren), is a critical concept in the classical Daoist text the Zhuangzi (5th–3rd century BC.).1 The concept refers to individuals with atypical body shapes. Some of them lack body parts of the standard human body, like a leg or toes. Some others have an atypical anatomy, like having a chin stuck down their navel; and some of them are, by social standards of the time, considered to be extremely ugly.1 These individuals are described as incr…Read more
  •  106
    In her new article in the American Journal of Bioethics, Jennifer Blumenthal-Barby (2024) provides at least three reasons that support her argument that the concept of personhood must be abandoned...