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124Genetic determinism, neuronal determinism, and determinism tout courtIn Judy Illes & Barbara J. Sahakian (eds.), Oxford Handbook of Neuroethics, Oxford University Press. pp. 151. 2013.This article analyses neuronal determinism and mentions that at first sight it appears to be a type of qualified determinism. Neurodeterminism is better conceived as determinism tout court when it is applied to human beings. It differs importantly from genetic determinism, together the two views that are often regarded as similar in form if not in content. Moreover, the article examines the question of genetic determinism, because it is a paradigm of qualified determinism. It then explains the m…Read more
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B. BAERTSCHI, FR. AZOUVI: "Maine de Biran et la Suisse" (review)Revue de Théologie Et de Philosophie 118 (n/a): 106. 1986.
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Maine de Biran et la Suisse, Cahiers de la Revue de Théologie et de Philosophie, n° 12Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 177 (3): 356-356. 1987.
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L'"idéologie subjective" de Maine de Biran et la phénoménologieRevue de Théologie Et de Philosophie 113 (n/a): 109. 1981.
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Le «machinisme des bêtes»: Tout compte fait, Descartes n'avait pas entièrement tortStudia Philosophica 55 53-83. 1996.
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Oeuvres, t. VIII : Rapports des sciences naturelles avec la psychologie et autres écrits sur la psychologieTijdschrift Voor Filosofie 49 (3): 543-543. 1987.
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Les circonstances de la justice internationaleStudia Philosophica 64 55-80. 2005.Distributive justice, like every other value, is not suspended in mid-air: its implementation depends on certain conditions, the well-known ‹circumstances of justice›. In this paper, I attempt to spell them out, first for justice proper, then for international justice. Those circumstances relate to the conceptual parts of justice and are four in number: scarcity, needs and merit, social cooperation, and authority of distribution. As far as international justice is concerned, there is a problem w…Read more
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194The Moral Status of Artificial LifeEnvironmental Values 21 (1): 5-18. 2012.Recently at the J. Craig Venter Institute, a microorganism has been created through synthetic biology. In the future, more complex living beings will very probably be produced. In our natural environment, we live amongst a whole variety of beings. Some of them have moral status — they have a moral importance and we cannot treat them in just any way we please —; some do not. When it becomes possible to create artificially living beings who naturally possess moral status, will this artificiality m…Read more