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136Devoured by our own children: the possibility and peril of moral status enhancementJournal of Medical Ethics 39 (2): 78-79. 2013.Ingmar Persson and Julian Savulescu1 warn of our destruction by the cognitively enhanced beings we create. Now, in a fascinating paper, Nicholas Agar2 warns of an even more disturbing prospect: cognitively enhanced beings may be entitled to sacrifice us for their own ends. These post-humans would likely conclude that they had higher moral status than we mere human beings, and we would have good reason to defer to their vastly superior moral knowledge. We would lack even the consolation of moral …Read more
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110An Unjustified Exception to an Unjust Law?American Journal of Bioethics 9 (8): 63-65. 2009.No abstract
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Reproductive TechnologyIn Hugh LaFollette (ed.), The Oxford Hndbk of Practical Ethics, Oxford University Press Uk. 2005.
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8Understanding the Relationship Between Disability and Well-BeingIn David Wasserman & Adrienne Asch (eds.), Disability and the Good Human Life, . pp. 139-67. 2015.
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203Physicians as researchers: Difficulties with the "similarity position"American Journal of Bioethics 6 (4). 2006.This Article does not have an abstract
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80Some moral issues in the correction of impairmentsJournal of Social Philosophy 27 (2): 128-145. 1996.
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11Reproductive TechnologyIn Hugh LaFollette (ed.), The International Encyclopedia of Ethics, Wiley-blackwell. 2013.
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74Challenges in a Divided Assessment of the Social Benefits and Risks of ResearchAmerican Journal of Bioethics 11 (5): 12-13. 2011.
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285Disability, Difference, Discrimination: Perspectives on Justice in Bioethics and Public Policy (edited book)Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. 1998.How should we respond to individuals with disabilities? What does it mean to be disabled? Over fifty million Americans, from neonates to the fragile elderly, are disabled. Some people say they have the right to full social participation, while others repudiate such claims as delusive or dangerous. In this compelling book, three experts in ethics, medicine, and the law address pressing disability questions in bioethics and public policy. Anita Silvers, David Wasserman, and Mary B. Mahowald test i…Read more
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175Selecting for Disability: Acceptable Lives, Acceptable ReasonsAmerican Journal of Bioethics 12 (8). 2012.The American Journal of Bioethics, Volume 12, Issue 8, Page 30-31, August 2012
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138Is Racial Profiling More Benign in Medicine Than Law Enforcement?The Journal of Ethics 15 (1-2). 2011.It might seem that racial profiling by doctors raised few of the same concerns as racial profiling by police, immigration, or airport security. This paper argues that the similarities are greater than first appear. The inappropriate use of racial generalizations by doctors may be as harmful and insulting as their use by law enforcement officials. Indeed, the former may be more problematic in compromising an ideal of individualized treatment that is more applicable to doctors than to police. Yet …Read more
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177Challenges of genetic testing in adolescents with cardiac arrhythmia syndromesJournal of Medical Ethics 38 (3): 163-167. 2012.The ability to sequence individual genomes is leading to the identification of an increasing number of genetic risk factors for serious diseases. Knowledge of these risk factors can often provide significant medical and psychological benefit, but also raises complex ethical and social issues. This paper focuses on one area of rapid progress: the identification of mutations causing long QT syndrome and other cardiac channel disorders, which can explain some previously unexplained deaths in infant…Read more
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128Disability, Diversity, and Preference for the Status Quo: Bias or Justifiable Preference?American Journal of Bioethics 15 (6): 11-12. 2015.
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184A Response to Nelson and MahowaldCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 16 (4): 468. 2007.It is gratifying that thoughtful philosophers and bioethicists like Mahowald and Nelson are continuing to address the objections to prenatal testing that have been made by disability scholars and advocates. But it is frustrating to see those objections presented in ways that reflect the doubts of those who reject them more than the intentions of those who make them, in ways that make those objections appear censorious toward pregnant women and prospective parents or naïve about nonverbal express…Read more
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96Bioethics and Disability: What's Health Got to Do with It?American Journal of Bioethics 1 (3): 59-60. 2001.
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280In her latest writing on the trolley problem, 'Turning the Trolley,' Judith Jarvis Thomson defends the following counter-intuitive position: if confronted with a choice of allowing a trolley to hit and kill five innocent people on the track straight ahead, or turning it onto one innocent person on a side-track, a bystander must allow it to hit the five straight ahead. In contrast, Thomson claims, the driver of the trolley has a duty to turn it from the five onto the one. Thomson’s argument is fu…Read more
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147When bad people do good things: will moral enhancement make the world a better place?Journal of Medical Ethics 40 (6): 374-375. 2014.In his thoughtful defence of very modest moral enhancement, David DeGrazia1 makes the following assumption: ‘Behavioural improvement is highly desirable in the interest of making the world a better place and securing better lives for human beings and other sentient beings’. Later in the paper, he gives a list of some psychological characteristics that ‘all reasonable people can agree … represent moral defects’. I think I am a reasonable person, and I agree that most if not all items on the lists…Read more
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2Performance-Enhancing Technologies and the Values of Athletic CompetitionPhilosophy and Public Policy Quarterly 28 (3/4): 22-27. 2008.What would be objectionable about sports doping if it were safe and legal? Some ethicists have justified their qualms about doping by invoking elusive distinctions between the natural and the artificial. But the harm in doping and other biotechnological enhancements is best understood in terms of the values of athletic competition—specifically, the spectators' identification with the performers, and the continuity and comparability of athletic achievement over time. Instead of endorsing categori…Read more
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521Harms to Future People and Procreative IntentionsIn David Wasserman & Melinda Roberts (eds.), Harming Future Persons: Ethics, Genetics and the Nonidentity Problem, Springer. pp. 265--285. 2009.
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238Debating Procreation: Is It Wrong to Reproduce? (edited book)Oxford University Press USA. 2015.While procreation is ubiquitous, attention to the ethical issues involved in creating children is relatively rare. In Debating Procreation, David Benatar and David Wasserman take opposing views on this important question. David Benatar argues for the anti-natalist view that it is always wrong to bring new people into existence. He argues that coming into existence is always a serious harm and that even if it were not always so, the risk of serious harm is sufficiently great to make procreation w…Read more
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130A Duty to Discriminate?American Journal of Bioethics 12 (4): 22-24. 2012.The American Journal of Bioethics, Volume 12, Issue 4, Page 22-24, April 2012
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52Disability Rights in Sports and EducationIn William John Morgan (ed.), Ethics in Sport, Human Kinetics. pp. 451. 2007.
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130Seeing Responsibility: Can Neuroimaging Teach Us Anything about Moral and Legal Responsibility?Hastings Center Report 44 (s2): 37-49. 2014.As imaging technologies help us understand the structure and function of the brain, providing insight into human capabilities as basic as vision and as complex as memory, and human conditions as impairing as depression and as fraught as psychopathy, some have asked whether they can also help us understand human agency. Specifically, could neuroimaging lead us to reassess the socially significant practice of assigning and taking responsibility?While responsibility itself is not a psychological pr…Read more
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86Is There Value in Identifying Individual Genetic Predispositions to Violence?Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 32 (1): 24-33. 2004.In this article I want to ask what we should do, either collectively or individually, if we could identify by genetic and family profding the 12% of the male population likely to commit almost half the violent crime in our society. What if we could identify some individuals in that 12% not only at birth, but in utero, or before implantation? I will explain the source of these figures later; for now, I will use them only to provide a concrete example of the kind of predictive claims we can expect…Read more
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52Impairment, disadvantage, and equality: A reply to Anita SilversJournal of Social Philosophy 25 (3): 181-188. 1994.
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8Ethical constraints on allowing or causing the existence of people with disabilitiesIn Kimberley Brownlee & Adam Cureton (eds.), Disability and Disadvantage, Oxford University Press. pp. 319-51. 2009.This chapter deals with parental virtue or familial virtue and reproductive decision-making, particularly when the potential child has some impairment. There is a moral asymmetry between actions that raise or those that lower the chances of having a child with impairment. The former is regarded as wrong while the latter is considered morally correct. This chapter argues that such asymmetry is against the ideal of unconditional parental acceptance of their child, whatever his condition is. It pro…Read more