•  2
    Approaches to Chan, Sŏn, and Zen Studies: Chinese Chan Buddhism and Its Spread throughout East Asia (edited book)
    with Albert Welter and Steven Heine
    State University of New York Press. 2022.
    _A comprehensive treatment of the shared traditions of Chan, Sŏn, and Zen in dynamic interaction across East Asia, acknowledging the changing and growing parameters of the field of Zen studies._ This volume focuses on Chinese Chan Buddhism and its spread across East Asia, with special attention to its impacts on Korean Sŏn and Japanese Zen. Zen enthralled the scholarly world throughout much of the twentieth century, and Zen Studies became a major academic discipline in its wake. Interpreted thro…Read more
  •  19
    Contributors
    with Roger T. Ames, Peter D. Hershock, Thomas P. Kasulis, Meera Sushila Viswanathan, James McRae, Heidi M. Hurd, James Peterman, Yang Liuxin, Baoyan Cheng, Xu Di, Kathleen M. Higgins, Purushottama Bilimoria, Kenneth W. Stikkers, Larry A. Hickman, Robert Smid, Nalini Bhushan, Jay L. Garfield, Oliver Leaman, James Behuniak Jr, Gordon Davis, Naoko Saito, Paul Standish, T. Yamauchi, Workineh Kelbessa, Karsten J. Struhl, Steven Burik, Amita Chatterjee, Steve Bein, May Sim, Wu Shiu-Ching, Steven F. Geisz, and Lori Keleher
    In Roger T. Ames Peter D. Hershock (ed.), Value and Values: Economics and Justice in an Age of Global Interdependence, University of Hawaii Press. pp. 539-550. 2015.
  •  32
    Why and how do women engage with Buddhism and philosophy? The present volume aims to answer these questions by examining the life and philosophy of a Korean Zen Buddhist nun, Kim Iryŏp (1896–1971). The daughter of a pastor, Iryŏp began questioning Christian doctrine as a teenager. In a few years, she became increasingly involved in women’s movements in Korea, speaking against society’s control of female sexuality and demanding sexual freedom and free divorce for women. While in her late twenties…Read more
  •  23
    © 2015 The American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons. The need to increase the donor pool for lung transplantation is a major public health issue. We previously found that administration of mesenchymal stem cells "rehabilitated" marginal donor lungs rejected for transplantation using ex vivo lung perfusion. However, the use of stem cells has some inherent limitation such as the potential for tumor formation. In the current study, we hypothesized that mic…Read more
  •  68
    Normothermic Regional Perfusion, Public Reason, and the Idea of Integrated Organismic Function
    with Samuel N. Doernberg and Robert D. Truog
    American Journal of Bioethics 24 (6): 38-40. 2024.
    Two of the lead articles in this issue examine the emerging practice of organ procurement by normothermic regional perfusion (NRP) in terms of whether or not these patients are “dead” at the time t...
  •  77
    Personhood and the Debate about the Beginning and End of Life
    with Robert Truog
    American Journal of Bioethics 24 (1): 20-23. 2024.
    In this commentary, we take up Jennifer Blumenthal-Barby’s (2024) important argument to depart from claims about personhood in bioethics. First, we want to extend Blumenthal-Barby’s critique of the...
  •  95
    In a recent Target Article Naomi Scheinerman (2023a) has offered an important and compelling call to institutionalize popular participation for heritable genome engineering through the inclusion of...
  •  61
    Nationality of Food: Cultural Politics on the UNESCO List of Intangible Cultural Heritage and Food Museums
    with Eunju Hwang
    Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2023 (202): 21-41. 2023.
    1. IntroductionIn 2020, when the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) certified Chinese salted pickled vegetables from Sichuan called pao cai, hina’s media, including the state-run Global Times newspaper, reported the news as if China had won the international standard for kimchi making,1 although the ISO clearly stated in the certification document that the certification did not apply to kimchi.2 This reporting provoked Koreans, and it quickly became a cultural dispute between t…Read more
  •  1300
    Rationing, Responsibility, and Vaccination during COVID-19: A Conceptual Map
    with Ben Davies
    American Journal of Bioethics 24 (7): 66-79. 2023.
    Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, shortages of scarce healthcare resources consistently presented significant moral and practical challenges. While the importance of vaccines as a key pharmaceutical intervention to stem pandemic scarcity was widely publicized, a sizable proportion of the population chose not to vaccinate. In response, some have defended the use of vaccination status as a criterion for the allocation of scarce medical resources. In this paper, we critically interpret this burgeon…Read more
  • The life and work of Kim Iryŏp (1896–1971) bear witness to Korea’s encounter with modernity. A prolific writer, Iryŏp reflected on identity and existential loneliness in her poems, short stories, and autobiographical essays. As a pioneering feminist intellectual, she dedicated herself to gender issues and understanding the changing role of women in Korean society. As an influential Buddhist nun, she examined religious teachings and strove to interpret modern human existence through a religious w…Read more
  •  21
    Index
    with Roger T. Ames, Peter D. Hershock, Thomas P. Kasulis, Meera Sushila Viswanathan, James McRae, Heidi M. Hurd, James Peterman, Yang Liuxin, Baoyan Cheng, Xu Di, Kathleen M. Higgins, Purushottama Bilimoria, Kenneth W. Stikkers, Larry A. Hickman, Robert Smid, Nalini Bhushan, Jay L. Garfield, Oliver Leaman, James Behuniak Jr, Gordon Davis, Naoko Saito, Paul Standish, T. Yamauchi, Workineh Kelbessa, Karsten J. Struhl, Steven Burik, Amita Chatterjee, Steve Bein, May Sim, Wu Shiu-Ching, Steven F. Geisz, and Lori Keleher
    In Roger T. Ames Peter D. Hershock (ed.), Value and Values: Economics and Justice in an Age of Global Interdependence, University of Hawaii Press. pp. 551-556. 2015.
  •  12
    The Role of Evidence in Medical-Legal Partnerships
    with Andrew F. Beck
    Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 53 (4): 538-539. 2025.
    In their article, Partono et al. report the results of a mixed-methods study aimed at evaluating the organizational features of medical-legal partnerships (MLPs) and their potential relation to overall quality of care and health outcomes for people living with HIV. The authors find that factors such as type of medical partner in the MLP (community-based healthcare organization vs. hospital system) and the colocation of legal and support services are associated with certain clinical outcomes such…Read more
  •  23
    Beyond the attention economy, towards an ecology of attending. A manifesto
    with Gunter Bombaerts, Tom Hannes, Martin Adam, Alessandra Aloisi, Joel Anderson, P. Sven Arvidson, Lawrence Berger, Stefano Davide Bettera, Enrico Campo, Laura Candiotto, Silvia Caprioglio Panizza, Anna Ciaunica, Yves Citton, Diego D.´Angelo, Matthew J. Dennis, Natalie Depraz, Peter Doran, Wolfgang Drechsler, William Edelglass, Iris Eisenberger, Mark Fortney, Beverley Foulks McGuire, Antony Fredriksson, Peter D. Hershock, Soraj Hongladarom, Wijnand IJsselsteijn, Beth Jacobs, Gabor Karsai, Steven Laureys, Thomas Taro Lennerfors, Jeanne Lim, Chien-Te Lin, William Lamson, Mark Losoncz, David Loy, Lavinia Marin, Bence Peter Marosan, Chiara Mascarello, David L. McMahan, Nina Petek, Anna Puzio, Katrien Schaubroeck, Shobhit Shakya, Juewei Shi, Elizaveta Solomonova, Francesco Tormen, Jitendra Uttam, Marieke van Vugt, Sebastjan Vörös, Maren Wehrle, Galit Wellner, Jason M. Wirth, Olaf Witkowski, Apiradee Wongkitrungrueng, Dale S. Wright, Hin Sing Yuen, and Yutong Zheng
    AI and Society 41 (1): 477-492. 2026.
    We endorse policymakers’ efforts to address the negative consequences of the attention economy’s technology but add that these approaches are often limited in their criticism of the systemic context of human attention. Starting from Buddhist philosophy, we advocate a broader approach: an ‘ecology of attending’ that centers on conceptualizing, designing, and using attention (1) in an embedded way and (2) focused on the alleviating of suffering. With ‘embedded’ we mean that attention is not a neut…Read more
  •  72
    Polygenic Risk Scoring and the Duty to Warn
    with Susannah Baruch and I. Glenn Cohen
    American Journal of Bioethics 25 (10): 47-50. 2025.
    In a recent Target Article, Madison Kilbride seeks to complicate the notion that the harms associated with disclosure in genetic and non-genetic contexts are distinct in principle, arguing instead...
  •  25
    Overlapping Method of Use Patents to Prevent Generic Entry (review)
    with Aaron S. Kesselheim and S. Sean Tu
    Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 1-3. forthcoming.
    Brand-name pharmaceutical firms increasingly use method of use patents and associated Orange Book “use codes” to delay generic entry, complicating the skinny labeling pathway that permits low-cost generics to omit patented indications from their labels and market their products for unpatented uses. Recent litigation, however, shows how overlapping use codes — targeting patient subgroups or biomarker thresholds rather than distinct conditions — can obstruct the skinny labeling pathway. Case studi…Read more