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6Inducements RevisitedBioethics 13 (2): 114-130. 2002.The paper defends the permissibility of paying inducements to research subjects against objections not covered in an earlier paper in Bioethics. The objections are that inducements would cause inequity, crowd out research, and undesirably commercialize the researcher‐subject relationship. The paper shows how these objections presuppose implausible factual and/or normative claims. The final position reached is a qualified defence of freedom of contract which not only supports the permissibility o…Read more
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18Inducement in ResearchBioethics 11 (5): 373-389. 2002.Opposition to inducement payments for research subjects is an international orthodoxy amongst writers of ethics committee guidelines. We offer an argument in favour of these payments. We also critically evaluate the best arguments we can find or devise against such payments, and except in one very limited range of circumstances, we find these unconvincing.
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131The Evolution of Modern Metaphysics: Making Sense of ThingsCambridge University Press. 2011.This book is concerned with the history of metaphysics since Descartes. Taking as its definition of metaphysics 'the most general attempt to make sense of things', it charts the evolution of this enterprise through various competing conceptions of its possibility, scope, and limits. The book is divided into three parts, dealing respectively with the early modern period, the late modern period in the analytic tradition, and the late modern period in non-analytic traditions. In its unusually wide …Read more
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247Reason, freedom and Kant: An exchangeKantian Review 12 (1): 113-133. 2007.According to Kant, being purely rational or purely reasonable and being autonomously free are one and the same thing. But how can this be so? How can my innate capacity for pure reason ever motivate me to do anything, whether the right thing or the wrong thing? What I will suggest is that the fundamental connection between reason and freedom, both for Kant and in reality, is precisely our human biological life and spontaneity of the will, a conjunctive intrinsic structural property of our animal…Read more
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69Time and Well-BeingIn Heather Dyke (ed.), Time and Ethics: Essays at the Intersection, Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 85-97. 2003.
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107The Human A Priori: Essays on How We Make Sense in Philosophy, Ethics, and MathematicsOxford University Press. 2023.The Human A Priori is a collection of essays by A. W. Moore, one of them previously unpublished and the rest all revised. These essays are all concerned, more or less directly, with something ineliminably anthropocentric in our systematic pursuit of a priori sense-making. Part I deals with the nature, scope, and limits of a priori sense-making in general. Parts II, III, and IV deal with what are often thought to be the three great exemplars of the systematic pursuit of such sense-making: philoso…Read more
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70Counterpoints in cancer: The somatic mutation theory under attackBioessays 33 (5): 313-314. 2011.
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74Realism and Religion: Philosophical and Theological Perspectives (edited book)Ashgate. 2007.This book draws together a distinguished group of philosophers and theologians to present new thinking on realism and religion.
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66Systems biology of mammalian cells: A report from the Freiburg conferenceBioessays 32 (12): 1099-1104. 2010.
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66What's in a title? A two‐step approach to optimisation for man and machineBioessays 32 (3): 183-184. 2010.
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66Synthetic biology: A tight‐rope walk between humility, ambition and languageBioessays 32 (8): 645-645. 2010.
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104On the state of scientific English and how to improve it – Part 4Bioessays 35 (11): 925-925. 2013.
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93On the state of Scientific English and how to improve it – Part 3Bioessays 35 (8): 667-667. 2013.
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60Cancer Ecology: The Intracellular Interactome Makes Little Sense without the Intercellular OneBioessays 40 (11): 1800202. 2018.
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56Compensation as a strategy for unavoidable oxidative damage in mitochondria?Bioessays 34 (8): 627-628. 2012.
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60Between cell‐level damage theories of ageing and whole organismsBioessays 34 (11): 915-915. 2012.
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43A twist in the FOXO tale: Edging closer to revealing the secrets of unlimited tissue renewalBioessays 35 (12): 1015-1016. 2013.
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66A day of systems and synthetic biology for non‐expertsBioessays 31 (1): 119-124. 2009.From understanding ageing to the creation of artificial membrane‐bounded ‘organisms’, systems biology and synthetic biology are seen as the latest revolutions in the life sciences. They certainly represent a major change of gear, but paradigm shifts? This is open to debate, to say the least. For scientists they open up exciting ways of studying living systems, of formulating the ‘laws of life’, and the relationship between the origin of life, evolution and artificial biological systems. However,…Read more
Areas of Interest
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |