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In the last fifteen years, there has been significant interest in
studying the brain structures involved in moral judgments using
novel techniques from neuroscience such as functional magnetic
resonance imaging (fMRI). Many people, including a number of
philosophers, believe that results from neuroscience have the
potential to settle seemingly intractable debates concerning the
nature, practice, and reliability of moral judgments. This has led
to a flurry of scientific and philosophical activities, resulting
in the rapid growth of the new field of moral neuroscience. There
is now a vast array of ongoing scientific research devoted towards
understanding the neural correlates of moral judgments, accompanied
by a large philosophical literature aimed at interpreting and
examining the methodology and the results of this research. This is
the first volume to take stock of fifteen years of research of this
fast-growing field of moral neuroscience and to recommend future
directions for research. It features the most up-to-date research
in this area, and it presents a wide variety of perspectives on
this topic.
What makes something a human right? What is the relationship
between the moral foundations of human rights and human rights law?
What are the difficulties of appealing to human rights?
This book offers the first comprehensive survey of current thinking
on the philosophical foundations of human rights. Divided into four
parts, this book focusses firstly on the moral grounds of human
rights, for example in our dignity, agency, interests or needs.
Secondly, it looks at the implications that different moral
perspectives on human rights bear for human rights law and
politics. Thirdly, it discusses specific and topical human rights
including freedom of expression and religion, security, health and
more controversial rights such as a human right to subsistence. The
final part discusses nuanced critical and reformative views on
human rights from feminist, Kantian and relativist perspectives
among others.
The essays represent new and canonical research by leading scholars
in the field. Each section is structured as a set of essays and
replies, offering a comprehensive analysis of different positions
within the debate in question. The introduction from the editors
will guide researchers and students navigating the diversity of
views on the philosophical foundations of human rights.
As Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies rapidly progress,
questions about the ethics of AI, in both the near-future and the
long-term, become more pressing than ever. This volume features
seventeen original essays by prominent AI scientists and
philosophers and represents the state-of-the-art thinking in this
fast-growing field. Organized into four sections, this volume
explores the issues surrounding how to build ethics into machines;
ethical issues in specific technologies, including self-driving
cars, autonomous weapon systems, surveillance algorithms, and sex
robots; the long term risks of superintelligence; and whether AI
systems can be conscious or have rights. Though the use and
practical applications of AI are growing exponentially, discussion
of its ethical implications is still in its infancy. This volume
provides an invaluable resource for thinking through the ethical
issues surrounding AI today and for shaping the study and
development of AI in the coming years.
Bioethics is the study of ethical issues arising out of advances in
the life sciences and medicine. Historically, bioethics has been
associated with issues in research ethics and clinical ethics as a
result of research scandals such as the Tuskegee Syphilis Study and
public debates about the definition of death, medical paternalism,
health care rationing, and abortion. As biomedical technologies
have advanced, challenging new questions have arisen for bioethics
and new sub-disciplines such as neuroethics and public health
ethics have entered the scene. This volume features ten original
essays on five cutting-edge controversies in bioethics written by
leading philosophers. I. Research Ethics: How Should We Justify
Ancillary Care Duties? II. Clinical Ethics: Are Psychopaths Morally
Accountable? III. Reproductive Ethics: Is There A Solution to the
Non-Identity Problem? IV. Neuroethics: What is Addiction and Does
It Excuse? V. Public Health Ethics: Is Luck Egalitarianism
Implausibly Harsh? S. Matthew Liao and Collin O'Neil's concise
introduction to the essays in the volume, the annotated
bibliographies and study questions for each controversy, and the
supplemental guide to additional current controversies in bioethics
give the reader a broad grasp of the different kinds of challenges
in bioethics.
In the last fifteen years, there has been significant interest in
studying the brain structures involved in moral judgments using
novel techniques from neuroscience such as functional magnetic
resonance imaging (fMRI). Many people, including a number of
philosophers, believe that results from neuroscience have the
potential to settle seemingly intractable debates concerning the
nature, practice, and reliability of moral judgments. This has led
to a flurry of scientific and philosophical activities, resulting
in the rapid growth of the new field of moral neuroscience. There
is now a vast array of ongoing scientific research devoted towards
understanding the neural correlates of moral judgments, accompanied
by a large philosophical literature aimed at interpreting and
examining the methodology and the results of this research. This is
the first volume to take stock of fifteen years of research of this
fast-growing field of moral neuroscience and to recommend future
directions for research. It features the most up-to-date research
in this area, and it presents a wide variety of perspectives on
this topic.
Bioethics is the study of ethical issues arising out of advances in
the life sciences and medicine. Historically, bioethics has been
associated with issues in research ethics and clinical ethics as a
result of research scandals such as the Tuskegee Syphilis Study and
public debates about the definition of death, medical paternalism,
health care rationing, and abortion. As biomedical technologies
have advanced, challenging new questions have arisen for bioethics
and new sub-disciplines such as neuroethics and public health
ethics have entered the scene. This volume features ten original
essays on five cutting-edge controversies in bioethics written by
leading philosophers. I. Research Ethics: How Should We Justify
Ancillary Care Duties? II. Clinical Ethics: Are Psychopaths Morally
Accountable? III. Reproductive Ethics: Is There A Solution to the
Non-Identity Problem? IV. Neuroethics: What is Addiction and Does
It Excuse? V. Public Health Ethics: Is Luck Egalitarianism
Implausibly Harsh? S. Matthew Liao and Collin O'Neil's concise
introduction to the essays in the volume, the annotated
bibliographies and study questions for each controversy, and the
supplemental guide to additional current controversies in bioethics
give the reader a broad grasp of the different kinds of challenges
in bioethics.
S. Matthew Liao argues here that children have a right to be loved.
To do so he investigates questions such as whether children are
rightholders; what grounds a child's right to beloved; whether love
is an appropriate object of a right; and other philosophical and
practical issues. His proposal is that all human beings have rights
to the fundamental conditions for pursuing a good life; therefore,
as human beings, children have human rights to the fundamental
conditions for pursuing a good life. Since being loved is one of
those fundamental conditions, children thus have a right to be
loved. Liao shows that this claim need not be merely empty
rhetoric, and that the arguments for this right can hang together
as a coherent whole. This is the first book to make a sustained
philosophical case for the right of children to be loved. It makes
a unique contribution to the fast-growing literature on family
ethics, in particular, on children's rights and parental rights and
responsibilities, and to the emerging field of the philosophy of
human rights.
As Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies rapidly progress,
questions about the ethics of AI, in both the near-future and the
long-term, become more pressing than ever. This volume features
seventeen original essays by prominent AI scientists and
philosophers and represents the state-of-the-art thinking in this
fast-growing field. Organized into four sections, this volume
explores the issues surrounding how to build ethics into machines;
ethical issues in specific technologies, including self-driving
cars, autonomous weapon systems, surveillance algorithms, and sex
robots; the long term risks of superintelligence; and whether AI
systems can be conscious or have rights. Though the use and
practical applications of AI are growing exponentially, discussion
of its ethical implications is still in its infancy. This volume
provides an invaluable resource for thinking through the ethical
issues surrounding AI today and for shaping the study and
development of AI in the coming years.
What makes something a human right? What is the relationship
between the moral foundations of human rights and human rights law?
What are the difficulties of appealing to human rights?
This book offers the first comprehensive survey of current thinking
on the philosophical foundations of human rights. Divided into four
parts, this book focusses firstly on the moral grounds of human
rights, for example in our dignity, agency, interests or needs.
Secondly, it looks at the implications that different moral
perspectives on human rights bear for human rights law and
politics. Thirdly, it discusses specific and topical human rights
including freedom of expression and religion, security, health and
more controversial rights such as a human right to subsistence. The
final part discusses nuanced critical and reformative views on
human rights from feminist, Kantian and relativist perspectives
among others.
The essays represent new and canonical research by leading scholars
in the field. Each section is structured as a set of essays and
replies, offering a comprehensive analysis of different positions
within the debate in question. The introduction from the editors
will guide researchers and students navigating the diversity of
views on the philosophical foundations of human rights.
Advances in our scientific understanding and technological power in
recent decades have dramatically amplified our capacity to
intentionally manipulate complex ecological and biological systems.
An implication of this is that biological and ecological problems
are increasingly understood and approached from an engineering
perspective. In environmental contexts, this is exemplified in the
pursuits of geoengineering, designer ecosystems, and conservation
cloning. In human health contexts, it is exemplified in the
development of synthetic biology, bionanotechnology, and human
enhancement technologies. Designer Biology: The Ethics of
Intensively Engineering Biological and Ecological Systems consists
of thirteen chapters (twelve of them original to the collection)
that address the ethical issues raised by technological
intervention and design across a broad range of biological and
ecological systems. Among the technologies addressed are
geoengineering, human enhancement, sex selection, genetic
modification, and synthetic biology. This collection advances and
enriches our understanding of the ethical issues raised by these
technologies and identifies general lessons about the ethics of
engineering complex biological and ecological systems that can be
applied as new technologies and practices emerge. The insights that
emerge will be especially valuable to students and scholars of
environmental ethics, bioethics, or technology ethics.
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