- Benjamin’s translation as dialectical abduction: a novel epistemic framework for diagnostic hypothesizing
- den Hartogh, Govert. What Kind of Death: The Ethics of Determining One’s Own Death. New York/London: Routledge, 2023. 402 pp. USD $ 128.00 (hardcover); USD $ 43.99 (paper); USD $ 43.99 (Ebook). ISBN 978–1-032–24796-0.
- Contributions of neo-Aristotelian phronesis to ethical medical practice
- Deckers, Jan. Fundamentals of Critical Thinking in Health Care Ethics and Law. Ghent, Belgium: Owl Press, 2023. 263 pp. $24.54(paperback). ISBN 978-9072201591.
- Reaffirming the irrationality of human confidence that an ageless existence would be better: A reply to García-Barranquero and Llorca Albareda
- The ethical inadequacy of uninformed surrogate consent: advancing respect for persons in clinical research
- Correction: On instrumentality and second-order effects: revisiting anti-natalism and animal farming
- Correction: Flourishing at the end of life
- On instrumentality and second-order effects: revisiting anti-natalism and animal farming
- Defending a choice-based system for the determination of death
- Response to “The conceptual Injustice of the brain death standard”
- Biting the bullet on ethical veganism, antinatalism, and the demands of morality
- Epicureanism and euthanasia
- Antinatalism and the vegan’s dilemma
- An ageless body does not imply transhumanism: A reply to Levin
- Risky first-in-human clinical trials on medically fragile persons: owning the moral cost
- Flourishing at the end of life
- Baruch Brody and the principle of justifiable homicide
- The self-fulfilling prophecy in medicine
- Keenan, James F., SJ: A history of Catholic theological ethics. New York: Paulist Press, 2022, 434 pp. $49.95 (paper), ISBN 978–0-8091–5544-6
- The irrationality of human confidence that an ageless existence would be better
- Take five? A coherentist argument why medical AI does not require a new ethical principle
- Catholic religious agency during the Covid-19 emergency: the issue of vaccines
- Reconsidering the utilitarian link between veganism and antinatalism
- Ethical prioritization of critical care resources during COVID-19: perspectives from Italy and the United States
- Autonomy-based bioethics and vulnerability during the COVID-19 pandemic: towards an African relational approach
- Global health, planetary health, One Health: conceptual and ethical challenges and concerns
- Facing a pandemic outbreak: issues of global health, ethics, and technology
- Tacit social experimentation with digital technologies during the Covid-19 crisis
- Using curiosity to render the invisible, visible
- Toward a digitalized medicine: the Covid-19 pandemic as a disclosure of the importance of digital communication in the clinical world
- Spiritual care in the dementia ward during a pandemic
- Should vegans have children? A response to Räsänen
- The conceptual injustice of the brain death standard
- James Rachels and the morality of euthanasia
- Ten have, Henk A.M.J. Wounded planet: How Declining Biodiversity Endangers Health and How Bioethics Can Help. John Hopkins University Press. 2019. 376 pp. Hard cover: ISBN: 978-1-4214-2745-4.
- Jotterand, F., M. Ienca, B. Elger, & T. Wangmo. Eds. Intelligent assistive technologies for dementia: clinical, ethical, social, and regulatory implications. Oxford University Press. 2019. 320 pp. ISBN: 13:9780190459802
- Death as the extinction of the source of value: the constructivist theory of death as an irreversible loss of moral status
- Bishop, Jeffrey P., M. Therese Lysaught, and Andrew A. Michel. Biopolitics after Neuroscience: Morality and the Economy of Virtue. London: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2022. 288pp. $115.00 (cloth); $39.95 (paper). ISBN 9781350288447.
- Culturally competent respect for the autonomy of Muslim patients: fostering patient agency by respecting justice
- Kairos in diagnostics
- Reviewers, 2023
- Sexual citizenship: defending society’s most disadvantaged
- The harm threshold and Mill’s harm principle
- The risk of normative bias in reporting empirical research: lessons learned from prenatal screening studies about the prominence of acknowledged limitations
- Moyse, Ashley. Resourcing Hope for Ageing and Dying in a Broken World: Wayfaring through Despair. Anthem Press, 2022. pp. 162. $125.00. (hardcover). ISBN: 13:9781785278617. (Ebook): 10:1:1785278624
- Refund: a defense of luck egalitarian policy in healthcare
- Chochinov, Harvey Max. Dignity in Care. The Human Side of Medicine. New York: Oxford University Press, 2023. 184 pp. (print) ISBN 9780199380428, (online) ISBN 9780199380459
- Age-based restrictions on reproductive care: discerning the arbitrary from the necessary
- Sex, demoralized
- Johnson, L. Syd M. The ethics of uncertainty: entangled ethical and epistemic risks in disorders of consciousness. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2021. 304 pp. $55 (hardcover). ISBN: 9780190943646
- In ethics a model is important: interview with Professor Edmund D. Pellegrino
- Correction: Defending the link between ethical veganism and antinatalism
- Response to comments on my paper on whole body gestational donation
- An account of medical treatment, with a preliminary account of medical conditions
- Making a dead woman pregnant? A critique of the thought experiment of Anna Smajdor
- Values, decision-making and empirical bioethics: a conceptual model for empirically identifying and analyzing value judgements
- The place of sexuality in society: misplaced grand theorising will sideline disabled people’s sexual rights
- Defending the link between ethical veganism and antinatalism
- Probability and informed consent
- A critique of whole body gestational donation
- Is whole-body gestational donation without explicit consent a valid alternative to surrogate motherhood? An ethical analysis through analogy reasoning and principlist approach
- Controversial arguments are controversial
- Policy change without ethical analysis? Commentary on the publication of Smajdor
- Why whole body gestational donation must be rejected: a response to Smajdor
- Why (at least some) moral vegans may have children: a response to Räsänen
- A letter to the article “Whole Body Gestational Donation” published by Anna Smajdor in Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics
- Public sexual health: replying to Firth and Neiders on sex doula programs
- Treat the dead, not just death, with dignity
- DeGrazia, David, and Millum, Joseph. A theory of bioethics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021. 316 pp. $99.99 (cloth) ISBN 978,316,515,839, $24.99 (paper) SBN 9,781,009,011,747
- Somatics and phenomenological psychopathology: a mental health proposal
- Epistemic injustice in the therapeutic relationship in psychiatry
- Boggatz Thomas (ed). Quality of life and person-centered care for older people. Springer, Cham (Switzerland), 2020. 466 pp. $59.99 (paper). ISBN 978-3-030-29989-7
- Why we have duties of autonomy towards marginal agents
- Saving unwanted children: a proposal for a National Rearing Institute
- Snead, O. Carter. What it means to be human: the case for the body in public bioethics. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2020. 321 pp. $41.00 (cloth); $22.95 (paper). ISBN 0-67-49877-21
- The indispensability of race in medicine
- A troubling foundational inconsistency: autonomy and collective agency in critical care decision-making
- Phenomenology’s place in the philosophy of medicine
- The virtues and the vices of the outrageous
- Subjectivity of pre-test probability value: controversies over the use of Bayes’ Theorem in medical diagnosis
- Controversial views and moral realism
- Suffering and the dilemmas of pediatric care: a response to Tyler Tate
- Anent the theoretical justification of a sex doula program
- Childbearing, abortion and regret: a response to Kate Greasley
- Reviewers, 2022
- Weak transhumanism: moderate enhancement as a non-radical path to radical enhancement
- Implicit understandings and trust in the doctor-patient relationship: a philosophy of language analysis of pre-operative evaluations
- Introduction: controversial arguments in bioethics
- Should vegans have children? Examining the links between animal ethics and antinatalism
- Correction to: Biographical lives and organ conscription
- Are some controversial views in bioethics Juvenalian satire without irony?
- Biological lives and organ conscription
- Why good work in philosophical bioethics often looks strange
- The religious character of secular arguments supporting euthanasia and what it implies for conscientious practice in medicine
- Whole body gestational donation
- Johnson, James A., Douglas E. Anderson, and Caren C. Rossow. Health Systems thinking: a primer. Burlington, MA: Jones & Bartlett Learning, 2020. 138 pp. ISBN 9781284167146
- The criticism of medicine at the end of its “golden age”
- Explanatory integration and integrated explanations in Darwinian medicine and evolutionary medicine
- Misapplying autonomy: why patient wishes cannot settle treatment decisions
- Towards a dispositionalist (and unifying) account of addiction
- The ubiquity of the fallacy of composition in cognitive enhancement and in education
- Robert Veatch’s early career in bioethics, contributions to the field, and career at Georgetown University
- Death as “benefit” in the context of non-voluntary euthanasia
- Correction to: How many ways can you die? Multiple biological deaths as a consequence of the multiple concepts of an organism
- Osteoporosis and risk of fracture: reference class problems are real
- Case analysis in ethics instruction: bootlegging theory in a topical structure
- Disability bioethics and the commitment to equality
- The evolution of research participant as partner: the seminal contributions of Bob Veatch
- S. Clarke, H. Zohny and J. Savulescu (eds), Rethinking Moral Status, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2021, ISBN: 978-0-19-289407-6
- The patient experience of medically unexplained symptoms: an existentialist analysis
- The principle of procreative beneficence and its implications for genetic engineering
- Global justice in the context of transnational surrogacy: an African bioethical perspective
- Rosamond Rhodes: The trusted doctor: medical ethics and professionalism
- Towards a systematic evaluation of moral bioenhancement
- How many ways can you die? Multiple biological deaths as a consequence of the multiple concepts of an organism
- ‘Experimental pregnancy’ revisited
- A festschrift in memory of Robert M. Veatch
- Kathleen Benton and Renzo Pegoraro (ed.): Finding dignity at the end of life: A spiritual reflection on palliative care
- Procreative responsibilities and the parental obligation objection
- Robert Veatch’s Disrupted Dialogue and its implications for bioethics
- The philosopher as partner: an introduction to the scholarship of Robert M. Veatch
- Robert Veatch’s transplantation ethics: obtaining and allocating organs from deceased persons
- Relational autonomy and the clinical relationship in dementia care
- A defense of surgical procedures regulation
- Thomas Boggatz (ed.): Quality of life and person-centered care for older people
- Defending secular clinical ethics expertise from an Engelhardt-inspired sense of theoretical crisis
- To harvest, procure, or receive? Organ transplantation metaphors and the technological imaginary
- Correction to: Transposon dynamics and the epigenetic switch hypothesis
- Correction to: Pain priors, polyeidism, and predictive power: a preliminary investigation into individual differences in ordinary thought about pain
- The inviolateness of life and equal protection: a defense of the dead-donor rule
- Introducing philosophy of medicine: three new books
- Is the replication crisis a base-rate fallacy?
- Maureen L. Condic: Untangling twinning: what science tells us about the nature of human embryos
- Philosophy of medicine in 2021
- Wakefield’s harmful dysfunction analysis of disorder and the problem of defining harm to nonsentient organisms
- The prospects of precision psychiatry
- Correction to: Experimental philosophy of medicine and the concepts of health and disease
- Ilora Finlay and Robert Preston: Death by appointment: a rational guide to the assisted dying debate
- What is morally at stake when using algorithms to make medical diagnoses? Expanding the discussion beyond risks and harms
- Pain priors, polyeidism, and predictive power: a preliminary investigation into individual differences in ordinary thought about pain
- A plea for an experimental philosophy of medicine
- Transposon dynamics and the epigenetic switch hypothesis
- Experimental philosophy of medicine and the concepts of health and disease
- Why bother the public? A critique of Leslie Cannold’s empirical research on ectogenesis
- Experimental philosophical bioethics and normative inference
- Cross-cultural bioethics: lessons from the Sub-Saharan African philosophy of ubuntu
- Patient confidentiality, the duty to protect, and psychotherapeutic care: perspectives from the philosophy of ubuntu
- Erwin B. Montgomery: Medical reasoning: the nature and use of medical knowledge
- Telling it like it was: dignity therapy and moral reckoning in palliative care
- Diagnosing death: the “fuzzy area” between life and decomposition
- The concept of disease in the time of COVID-19
- What is a reasonable framework for new non-validated treatments?
- Nathan Carlin: Pastoral aesthetics: a theological perspective on principlist bioethics
- Vera Mackie, Nicola J. Marks, and Sarah Ferber (eds): The reproductive industry: intimate experiences and global processes
- Critical conversations at the crossroads
- The ethics of innovation for Alzheimer’s disease: the risk of overstating evidence for metabolic enhancement protocols
- What we talk about when we talk about pediatric suffering
- Valuing life and evaluating suffering in infants with life-limiting illness
- Philosophical investigations into the essence of pediatric suffering
- Correction to: Whole-brain death and integration: realigning the ontological concept with clinical diagnostic tests
- Our suffering and the suffering of our time
- Relational suffering and the moral authority of love and care
- The right to assistive technology
- Gregory L. Eastwood: Finishing our story: preparing for the end of life
- A naturalist response to Kingma’s critique of naturalist accounts of disease
- Addressing complex hospital discharge by cultivating the virtues of acknowledged dependence
- Michael J. Balboni and John R. Peteet (eds): Spirituality and religion within the culture of medicine: from evidence to practice
- Walter Glannon: Psychiatric neuroethics: studies in research and practice
- Mary Ann G. Cutter: Thinking through breast cancer: a philosophical exploration of diagnosis, treatment, and survival
- Experiential knowledge in clinical medicine: use and justification
- Is skin bleaching a moral wrong? An African bioethical perspective
- Making sense of “the inevitable”
- Eudaimonia and well-being: questioning the moral authority of advance directives in dementia
- Medical disorder, harm, and damage
- John Keown: Euthanasia, ethics and public policy: an argument against legalisation , 2nd edition
- Thomas Schramme: Theories of health justice: just enough health
- Conscience, conscientious objections, and medicine
- Preventing conscientious objection in medicine from running amok: a defense of reasonable accommodation
- Protecting reasonable conscientious refusals in health care
- Conscientious objection in health care
- Conscience-based refusal of patient care in medicine: a consequentialist analysis
- Why psychological accounts of personal identity can accept a brain death criterion and biological definition of death
- Conscience, tolerance, and pluralism in health care
- When is somebody just some body? Ethics as first philosophy and the brain death debate
- Brain death: new questions and fresh perspectives
- Controversies in defining death: a case for choice
- Whole-brain death and integration: realigning the ontological concept with clinical diagnostic tests
- Instrumentalist analyses of the functions of ethics concept-principles: a proposal for synergetic empirical and conceptual enrichment
- Correction to: Stephen Scher and Kasia Kozlowska: Rethinking health care ethics
- When are you dead enough to be a donor? Can any feasible protocol for the determination of death on circulatory criteria respect the dead donor rule?
- The human organism is not a conductorless orchestra: a defense of brain death as true biological death
- Harm should not be a necessary criterion for mental disorder: some reflections on the DSM-5 definition of mental disorder
- Françoise Baylis and Angela Ballantyne (eds): Clinical research involving pregnant women
- Jeffrey P. Kahn, Anna C. Mastroianni, and Jeremy Sugarman (eds): Beyond consent: seeking justice in research , 2nd edition
- Leroy C. Edozien: Self-determination in health care: a property approach to the protection of patients’ rights
- Intervention principles in pediatric health care: the difference between physicians and the state
- Ezekiel Emanuel, Andrew Steinmetz, and Harald Schmidt (eds): Rationing and resource allocation in healthcare: essential readings
- Stephen Scher and Kasia Kozlowska: Rethinking health care ethics
- Pellegrino, MacIntyre, and the internal morality of clinical medicine
- Professing clinical medicine in an evolving health care network
- Grounding medical ethics in philosophy of medicine: problematic and potential
- Engaging Pellegrino’s philosophy of medicine: Can one of the founders of the field still help us today?
- The healing relationship: Edmund Pellegrino’s philosophy of the physician–patient encounter
- The ends of medicine and the crisis of chronic pain
- Toward a Pellegrino-inspired theory of value in health care
- Taking patient virtue seriously
- Is “aid in dying” suicide?
- Death, unity, and the brain
- The harm of medical disorder as harm in the damage sense
- Outcome-adaptive randomization in clinical trials: issues of participant welfare and autonomy
- Evidence for personalised medicine: mechanisms, correlation, and new kinds of black box
- Beyond the Equivalence Thesis: how to think about the ethics of withdrawing and withholding life-saving medical treatment
- Whose harm? Which metaphysic?
- Akira Akabayashi (ed): The future of bioethics: international dialogues
- Jacob Stegenga: Medical nihilism
- “Just do your job”: technology, bureaucracy, and the eclipse of conscience in contemporary medicine
- Enchanted nature, dissected nature: the case of Galen’s anatomical theology
- Understanding modern, technological medicine: enchanted, disenchanted, or other?
- Re-enchanting the body: overcoming the melancholy of anatomy
- On the disenchantment of medicine: Abraham Joshua Heschel’s 1964 address to the American Medical Association
- Patient reflections on the disenchantment of techno-medicine
- The worthless remains of a physician’s calling: Max Weber, William Osler, and the last virtue of physicians
- Rivka Weinberg: The risk of a lifetime: how, when, and why procreation may be permissible
- Paula Gerber and Katie O’Byrne (eds): Surrogacy, law and human rights
- The dramatic essence of the narrative approach
- Henry S. Perkins: A guide to psychosocial and spiritual care at the end of life
- Joo-Young Lee: A human rights framework for intellectual property, innovation and access to medicines
- Should physicians be empathetic? Rethinking clinical empathy
- Twin Inc.
- Deborah Lynn Steinberg: Genes and the bioimaginary: science, spectacle, culture
- Luciana Caenazzo, Lucia Mariani, and Renzo Pegoraro (eds): Convergence of new emerging technologies: ethical challenges and new responsibilities
- Birth with dignity from the Confucian perspective
- Steve Clarke, Julian Savulescu, C.A.J. Coady, Alberto Giubilini, and Sagar Sanyal (eds): The ethics of human enhancement: understanding the debate
- Palliative sedation: clinical context and ethical questions
- Nicholas Agar: Truly human enhancement: a philosophical defense of limits
- The last low whispers of our dead: when is it ethically justifiable to render a patient unconscious until death?
- Henk ten Have: Global bioethics: an introduction
- Violence, research, and non-identity in the psychiatric clinic
- Proportionate palliative sedation and the giving of a deadly drug: the conundrum
- Sarah Ferber: Bioethics in historical perspective
- Letter to the editor
- Reckoning with the last enemy
- Benjamin Smart: Concepts and causes in the philosophy of disease
- The discourse on faith and medicine: a tale of two literatures
- Comforting when we cannot heal: the ethics of palliative sedation
- James Tabery: Beyond versus: the struggle to understand the interaction of nature and nurture
- Taking responsibility for health in an epistemically polluted environment
- Conscientious objection and person-centered care
- Against the iDoctor: why artificial intelligence should not replace physician judgment
- Sedation and care at the end of life
- The composite redesign of humanity’s nature: a work in process
- Prisoners’ competence to die: hunger strike and cognitive competence
- Fredrik Svenaeus: Phenomenological bioethics: medical technologies, human suffering, and the meaning of being alive
- Physician-assisted dying: thoughts drawn from Albert Camus’ writing
- The ethics of separating conjoined twins: two arguments against
- Antoine Suarez, Joachim Huarte (eds): Is this cell a human being? Exploring the status of embryos, stem cells and human – animal hybrids
- A new path for humanistic medicine
- Inmaculada de Melo-Martín: Rethinking reprogenetics: enhancing ethical analyses of reprogenetic technologies. Oxford University Press, New York, 2017, 288 pp, ISBN 9780190460204
- How (not) to think of the ‘dead-donor’ rule
- Miriam Solomon, Jeremy R. Simon, and Harold Kincaid (eds): The Routledge companion to philosophy of medicine
- Marcum, James A. (ed): The Bloomsbury companion to contemporary philosophy of medicine
- Thomas Schramme and Steven Edwards (eds): Handbook of the philosophy of medicine
- Philosophy of medicine 2017: reviewing the situation
- What does the character of medicine as a social practice imply for professional conscientious objection?
- Gender by Dasein ? A Heideggerian critique of Suzanne Kessler and the medical management of infants born with disorders of sexual development
- Robyn Bluhm: Knowing and acting in medicine
- John C. Moskop: Ethics and health care: an introduction
- Narrative self-appropriation: embodiment, alienness, and personal responsibility in the context of borderline personality disorder
- Personhood, pregnancy, and gender: a reply to Hershenov and Hershenov
- Health, interests, and equality
- If Abortion, then Infanticide
- Understanding disease and illness
- Exemplars, ethics, and illness narratives
- Harm and the concept of medical disorder
- Symptom modelling can be influenced by psychiatric categories: choices for research domain criteria (RDoC)
- Diagnosis, narrative identity, and asymptomatic disease
- Where’s the problem? Considering Laing and Esterson’s account of schizophrenia, social models of disability, and extended mental disorder
- The muddle of medicalization: pathologizing or medicalizing?
- Multiple studies and weak evidential defeat
- Evaluating the UK House of Commons Science and Technology Committee’s position on the implausible effectiveness of homeopathic treatments
- Re-evaluating concepts of biological function in clinical medicine: towards a new naturalistic theory of disease
- From method to hermeneutics: which epistemological framework for narrative medicine?
- Alex Broom: Dying: a social perspective on the end of life
- Chronicles of communication and power: informed consent to sterilisation in the Namibian Supreme Court’s LM judgment of 2015
- Hearing sub-Saharan African voices in bioethics
- Partiality and distributive justice in African bioethics
- Giving voice to African thought in medical research ethics
- Ancillary care obligations in light of an African bioethic: from entrustment to communion
- Dealing with the other between the ethical and the moral: albinism on the African continent
- Franklin G. Miller and Robert D. Truog: Death, dying, and organ transplantation: reconstructing medical ethics at the end of life
- Erratum to: Solidarity, justice, and recognition of the other
- Clashes of consensus: on the problem of both justifying abortion of fetuses with Down syndrome and rejecting infanticide
- Indeterminacy and the principle of need
- An integral approach to health science and healthcare
- Death with dignity from the Confucian perspective
- Jochen Vollmann, Verena Sandow, Sabastian Wäscher, and Jan Schildmann (eds): The ethics of personalised medicine: critical perspectives
- Erratum to: The causal explanatory functions of medical diagnoses
- The causal explanatory functions of medical diagnoses
- Susan R. Holman: Beholden: religion, global health, and human rights
- “Big eye” surgery: the ethics of medicalizing Asian features
- Privacy, autonomy, and public policy: French and North American perspectives
- From solidarity to autonomy: towards a redefinition of the parameters of the notion of autonomy
- Solidarity and autonomy: two conflicting values in English and French health care and bioethics debates?