Publications

Sex differences and neuroethics (2010)

Previous discussions in the field of neuroethics have ignored the ever-growing neuroscientific interpretation of sex differences in brains. If there are indeed significant differences in the brains of men and women, and in the brains of boys and girls, the ethical and...

Bioethics and Human Rights: Curb Your Enthusiasm

A call for global bioethics has been made. In an age of pandemics, international drug trials and genetic technology, health has become global and bioethics must follow suit. George Annas is one of a number of thinkers who recommend that bioethics should go beyond the traditional...

Human dignity and human rights in bioethics: the Kantian approach

The concept of human dignity plays an important role in the public discussion of ethical issues concerning modern medicine and biology. At the same time, there is widespread scepticism about the possibility of defining the content and claims of human dignity. The article goes as far as ...

It Is Time to Expand the Scope and Reach of Neuroethics (2019)

Indeed, there is a growing need for neuroethics and neuroscience to work together to better identify and analyse the ethical issues that arise in brain research. Equally important, however, is their collaboration in providing the necessary conceptual...

A Sensitive Period: Bioethics, Human Rights, and Child Development

The conceptual synergies arising from the integration of these domains are significant, although insufficiently explored, and are best seen through their application to specific health policy domains. ECD represents a particularly relevant case study: it is characterised by...

The New Ethics of Neuroethics (2018)

According to a well-known distinction, neuroethics includes the neuroscience of ethics and the ethics of neuroscience. In neuroethics, these two parts have given rise to separate lines of enquiry, and there has been no discussion of how the two parts overlap. In this article, the author attempts to relate ...

Human rights, bioethics, and mental disorder

This article discusses international human rights instruments that set minimum standards for the content and application of mental health legislation. The article considers the extent to which the various instruments impose both 'negative obligations' ...

Human Dignity in Bioethics and Biolaw

The concept of human dignity is increasingly invoked in the bioethics debate, as well as in international instruments on biotechnology and biomedicine. While some commentators believe that invoking human dignity is something ...

HUMAN DIGNITY, BIOETHICS, AND HUMAN RIGHTS

The authors of this article analyse and evaluate the Universal Draft Declaration on Bioethics and Human Rights published by UNESCO. They argue that the Draft has two main weaknesses. It unnecessarily limits the scope of bioethics to the life sciences and their practical applications and does not...

Neuroethics scope at a glance (2015)

The term neuroethics describes a field of bioethics that deals with dilemmas arising from developments in neuroscience. Why are we so sensitive to the considerations of neuroethics? Because it involves the brain, the organ responsible for our perception, our thoughts and our conscience. Since 2002...

The Need for a Conceptual Expansion of Neuroethics (2019)

In Neuroethics at 15: The Current and Future Environment for Neuroethics, the Emerging Issues Task Force provides an overview of current and future neuroethics topics and foreseeable challenges facing the field. The authors note,...

Bioethics and health and human rights: a critical view

Two new fields of research on ethical issues in medicine have emerged in recent decades. These are the fields of bioethics, health and human rights. In this critical review of these fields, the author argues that bioethics, in part because it has been so...