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Kent A. Peacock

University of Lethbridge
  •  Home
  •  Publications
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  •  Recommended
    10
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    14

 More details
  • University of Lethbridge
    Department of Philosophy
    Regular Faculty
Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada
Areas of Specialization
Applied Ethics
Logic and Philosophy of Logic
Philosophy of Biology
Philosophy of Physical Science
Areas of Interest
Applied Ethics
Logic and Philosophy of Logic
Philosophy of Biology
Philosophy of Physical Science
  • My recommendations
    10
  • My publications recommended by others
  • Whither a Welfare-Funded Sex Doula' Programme?
    Steven J. Firth
    Journal of Medical Ethics Recent Issues 45 (6): 361-364. 2019.
    The sexual citizenship of disabled persons is an ethically contentious issue with important and broad-reaching ramifications. Awareness of the issue has risen considerably due to the increasingly public responses from charitable organisations which have recently sought to respond to the needs of disabled persons—yet this important debate still struggles for traction in academia. In response, this paper continues the debate raised in this journal between Appel and Di Nucci, concurring with Appel’…Read more
    The sexual citizenship of disabled persons is an ethically contentious issue with important and broad-reaching ramifications. Awareness of the issue has risen considerably due to the increasingly public responses from charitable organisations which have recently sought to respond to the needs of disabled persons—yet this important debate still struggles for traction in academia. In response, this paper continues the debate raised in this journal between Appel and Di Nucci, concurring with Appel’s proposals that sexual pleasure is a fundamental human right and that access to sexual citizenship for the severely disabled should be publicly funded. To that endeavour, this paper refutes Di Nucci’s criticism of Appel’s sex rights for the disabled and shows how Di Nucci’s alternative solution is iniquitous. To advance the debate, I argue that a welfare-funded ‘sex doula' programme would be uniquely positioned to respond to the sexual citizenship issues of disabled persons.
  • The place of sexuality in society: misplaced grand theorising will sideline disabled people’s sexual rights
    Steven J. Firth and Ivars Neiders
    Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 44 (4): 405-409. 2023.
  • Sexual citizenship: defending society’s most disadvantaged
    Steven J. Firth and Ivars Neiders
    Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 2023 (1): 1-4. 2023.
  • The Bioethics of Space Exploration, by Konrad Szocik
    Steven J. Firth
    Teaching Philosophy 47 (2): 292-296. 2024.
  • Antinatalism, Extinction, and the End of Procreative Self-Corruption, by Matti Häyry and Amanda Sukenick (review)
    Steven J. Firth
    Teaching Philosophy 47 (4): 610-613. 2024.
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