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  • Well, he did make the trains run on time

      Well, they say of Mussolini, at least he made the trains run on time. Actually, that’s disputed, but that’s by-the-by.  While watching the telly, I was struck by a remark of Scotland’s First Minister, Alex Salmond, on the resignation of the leader of Scotland’s Roman Catholic community, Cardinal Keith O’Brien following allegation of sexual

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  • Is this the real life, is this just fantasy? When should we act against disturbing imagination

    A British nurse has been arrested for claiming online to have eaten two women, with the police digging up his garden. This is the latest twist on the Gilberto Valle case, where a New York policeman stands accused for plotting to kidnap, rape, murder and cannibalize women. The case hinges upon whether the disturbing online discussions

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  • What social contract?

    As I said last time, I’ve been reading Michael Huemer’s book:  The Problem of Political Authority. The problem of political authority is the problem of justifying coercion by the government  when common sense morality rules out the same behaviour done by anyone else. The point here is that government has no special right to command

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  • Why advertising gay conversion therapy is like advertising make-up

    by Rebecca Roache Various news sources—including The Huffington Post, Gay Star News, and the London Evening Standard—are reporting a High Court case in which a campaigner for gay conversion therapy is fighting Transport for London (TfL) over a ban on its bus adverts that suggest that homosexuality can be ‘cured’. Dr Mike Davidson is head

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  • Wall St, Charity, and Saving the World

    Today I started writing for Quartz magazine, the Atlantic’s new on-line business magazine.  My first article is on saving the world by funding charities rather than working for charities – a topic that I’ve written on previously for the Practical Ethics blog. The basic idea is that, often, one can do more good by choosing

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  • The Ethics of Meatballs

    In the light of the unfolding horsemeat scandal, it was only a matter of time before some equine entrails were uncovered in an Ikea meatball. This is a shame on many levels, not least for the poor pigs, cows, and horses whose flesh will now end up as landfill. I personally am quite partial to

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  • Announcement: Student Prize Competition ‘Enhancing Humanity’s Collective Wisdom’

    The Future of Humanity Institute’s second thesis prize competition for students focuses on a “big picture” question with important implications for practical ethics: how can we best prepare humanity to address the global challenges of the coming century?”. First prize £2000. Humanity has become more and more connected, from the national level to the personal. Yet are

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  • If The Jury System Is The Best Option, Can We Make it Better?

    By Julian Savulescu and Anders Sandberg Vicky Pryce, wife of disgraced ex-MP Chris Huhne, is back in court this week after  the jury trying her case  was  discharged last week having failed to reach a verdict on her charges of perverting the course of justice. In 2003, Pryce accepted Huhne’s speeding points, but is claiming

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  • The Way Forward: Mapping Brains and Finding Direction

    According to a recent report in the New York Times, the United States government will soon announce plans to fund the Brain Activity Map. Modelled on the highly successful Human Genome Project, the Brain Activity Map is an effort to identify functional networks of neurons, possibly leading to a full understanding of how mental processes

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  • Psychosurgery: avoiding old problems, facing new ones

    Antonio De Salles, Professor of Neurosurgery – UCLA Lincoln Frias, postdoct UFMG-Brazil, International Neuroethics Society Jorge Moll,  D’Or Institute-Brazil, International Neuroethics Society   Psychosurgery has a bad name. The destruction or disconnection of brain tissue to treat mental illness was brought into disrepute by controversial figures of the past, who performed lobotomies with poorly defined clinical

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