•  78
    Why Moral Bioenhancement Cannot Reliably Produce Virtue
    with Gina Lebkuecher, Marley Hornewer, Maya V. Roytman, and Joseph M. Vukov
    Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 49 (6): 560-575. 2024.
    Moral bioenhancement presents the possibility of enhancing morally desirable emotions and dispositions. While some scholars have proposed that moral bioenhancement can produce virtue, we argue that within a virtue ethics framework moral bioenhancement cannot reliably produce virtue. Moreover, on a virtue ethics framework, the pursuit of moral bioenhancement carries moral risks. To make this argument, we consider three aspects of virtue—its motivational, rational, and behavioral components. In or…Read more
  •  724
    Please Don't Call Us Jerks
    with Marley Hornewer, Sarah Khan, Rohan Meda, Kit Rempala, and Joseph Vukov
    The Philosopher 115. 2020.
    A review of Eric Schwitzgebel's book "A Theory of Jerks and Other Philosophical Misadventures" (2020)
  •  132
    Bioenhanced “Virtues” May Threaten Personal Identity
    with Gina Lebkuecher, Kit Rempala, Marley Hornewer, and Joseph Vukov
    American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 12 (2): 117-119. 2021.
    Fabiano argues that virtue theory offers the best “safety framework” for mitigating the risks of moral enhancement (1). He advances five desiderata for an ideal safety framework and then explains how virtue theory satisfies each. Among these desiderata is the “preservation of identity” (1). Fabiano argues that moral enhancement can safely preserve personal identity when carried out within the framework of virtue theory. We suggest Fabiano's argument for this conclusion falls short, since contra …Read more
  •  92
    Extended Frameworks for Extended Reality: Ethical Considerations
    with Michael B. Burns, Gina Lebkuecher, Sophia Rahman, Maya Roytman, and Joseph Vukov
    American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 13 (3): 171-173. 2022.
    David Chalmers (2022) argues that reality as we encounter it in virtual reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR) is just as real as the everyday physical world. We may not agree with Chalmers’s prop...
  •  108
    Integrating Neuroethics and Neuroscience: A Framework
    with Joseph Vukov, Sarah Khan, Marley Hornewer, Rohan Meda, and Kit Rempala
    American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 11 (3): 217-218. 2020.
    The BRAIN 2.0 Neuroethics Report reflects on the ways in which neuroscientific research may inform our understanding of concepts such as consciousness and empathy, and how advances in this understanding might in turn affect practices such as research on non-human animal primates. Generally, the Report calls for “the integration of neuroscience and neuroethics during the remaining years of the BRAIN initiative and beyond” (NIH 2019). In responding to the Report, the articles in this issue grapple…Read more
  •  92
    Harm Reduction Models: Roadmaps for Transformative Experiences
    with Kit Rempala, Marley Hornewer, Maya Roytman, Rohan Meda, and Joseph Vukov
    American Journal of Bioethics 21 (7): 63-65. 2021.
    Patients with severe and enduring anorexia nervosa have a relatively low chance of attaining the symptom-free recovery that traditional eating disorder treatment programs endorse (Bianchi, S...
  •  61
    The Dark Side of Morality: Grayer than You Think?
    with Kit Rempala and Marley Hornewer
    American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 11 (4): 295-297. 2020.