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  • Magic tricks and moral fibre

    By Charles Foster How well do you know yourself? Can you identify confidently your convictions on major moral issues? If you can, do you think you could change them in a moment, and argue robustly and with conviction for exactly the opposite position? Most people will say, unhesitatingly, ‘very well’, ‘yes’, and ‘of course not’.…

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  • How to be a high impact philosopher, part II

    In a previous post, I discussed how, as a philosopher, one should decide on a research areas.  I suggested that one method was to work out what are potentially the biggest problems the world faces, work out what the crucial normative consideration are, and then work on those areas.  Call that the top-down method: starting…

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  • Does committing a murder make a 13-year-old an adult? In US courts it does…

    Some days ago, two 13-year-old boys have been charged with first degree murder in Wisconsin (USA), as reported by the Daily News (New York). Allegedly, they went to one of the boy’s great-grandmother’s home, killed her using a hatchet and hammer, then stole her jewellery and her car – and went for a pizza afterwards.…

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  • Are Open-ended Sentences Unjust?

    The European Court of Human Rights recently ruled ‘arbitrary and unlawful’ the UK practice of indeterminate prison sentences for the protection of the public (IPPs). Currently more than 6,000 prisoners in this country are serving such sentences. The judges did not, however, rule the very idea of IPPs to be unlawful. What they quite rightly…

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  • Focus on the important things: reforming medical trials

    As Ben Goldacre reveals, the status quo in drug testing is nothing less than a scandal. Pharmaceutical companies are suppressing and blocking information, perfectly legally, that is causing adults and children to die. Reforming the system wouldn’t be too hard – a registry for all drug trials, before they begin, should be enough to get rid of…

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  • Dangerous Doctors and Immoral Doctors

    In general, if you know someone to be a danger to others you have a duty to do something about it. Exactly what you are obliged to do depends on the person, the situation and you. At the very least you ought to warn others. In general, and apart from such basic duties as not…

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  • Don’t Give Money to Beggars

    I have sometimes given money to beggars. On cold autumn days, when a homeless man has seemed to be in need of some money to buy food or a cup of coffee, I have occasionally dropped him a few coins. Those coins, I have thought, mean much more to him than they do to me,…

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  • Announcement: Making Better Babies, Pro and Con: A Debate

    October 2, 6.00 – 7.30 p.m. BMW Edge, Federation Square, Melbourne ALL WELCOME Public debate between Julian Savulescu (Oxford University) and Rob Sparrow (Monash University). Further information

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  • Hillsborough, Heysel and the Availability Bias

    One of my clearest childhood memories is of seeing images  of the 1989 Hillsborough Disaster on the television news. Ninety-six Liverpool fans died in the crush, with an estimated 766 injured. I lived on the other side of the world, had never been to see a football game, and presumably had little comprehension of what…

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  • Applied Ethics Plus

    Reflect for a moment on the place you call home. Perhaps this is the place where you grew up, and where you return to from time to time to see family and old friends. Or maybe it’s somewhere you’ve subsequently settled and built your life. Somewhere, at least, that you have a fondness for, though…

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