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  • Pandemic ethics: Party to the flu (or vigilante vaccination)

    A public health expert has warned yesterday against the idea of swine-flu parties, arguing that it may undermine the fight against the emerging pandemic. But others, including James Delingpole in the Telegraph have embraced the idea, hoping that mild influenza now will protect against more serious illness later. Exposure parties might be thought of as

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  • Don’t be Evil — and prove it.

    A new angle has recently come to light regarding the unrest in Iran: well known western companies provided the technology the government are using to eavesdrop on its citizens. The Washington Times and Wall Street Journal have reported on the fact that Nokia and Siemens have sold special equipment to Iran's state-owned telecommunications company, which

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  • Oxford Debates Cont’d – Opposer’s update 1

    Part of the debate "The NHS should not treat self-inflicted injuries" Opposer: Charles FosterUpdate 1 It simply won't do to underplay the practical difficulties posed by this motion. The motion is not 'The NHS should not treat those illnesses which can be shown beyond any doubt to have been self-inflicted', but 'The NHS should not

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  • Trackr the Most Cloneworthy Dog: Best Friends Again?

    According to recent media reports, a competition to find the world’s most cloneworthy dog has been organised by the American firm BioArts International http://www.bioarts.com/about_us.htm. BioArts has a subsidiary, Encore Pet Science, which now offers a commercial dog cloning service. The world’s first commercially cloned god, Lancelot Encore, was born late last year and cost US$155,000-.

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  • Jackson, Enhancement and the American Dream

    What can we learn from Michael Jackson's tragic premature death? The autopsy will be performed later today which may reveal the immediate cause of death. But whatever the immediate medical cause of death, the ultimate cause is clear: death by social malfunctioning.

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  • The good example

    Last time I wrote about our potential to model ourselves on others, to be inspired by the good example they might be setting.  In this blog I shift the focus to the role model and the idea of leading by example. How might we recognise the appropriate role model – and perhaps more pressingly –

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  • Oxford Debates Cont’d – Proposer’s update 1

    Part of the debate "The NHS should not treat self-inflicted injuries" Proposer: Dr Mark SheehanUpdate 1 There is a robust system in place in the NHS that grapples with questions like ours regularly. Far from these being my decisions, or the decisions of 'right-minded people', this system is open, publicly accessible, and accountable. Indeed, given

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  • To Prosecute or Not to Prosecute: Torture, Politics and the Rule of Law

    This past April, The New York Times reported that a form of enhanced interrogation known as “waterboarding” was used on Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, confessed mastermind of the 9-11 attacks, upwards of 183 times, and that the same technique was performed on the high value Al Qaeda operative Abu Zubaydah at least 83 times. This information

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  • Umbilical cord blood donation: opt out or work on Sundays?

    Umbilical cord blood (UCB) contains haematopoietic stem cells, which can be used for the treatment of several lethal disorders, including leukaemia and several types of anaemia. Other sources of haematopoietic stem cells are bone marrow and ordinary peripheral blood. Unlike bone marrow donation, which requires general anaesthesia, UCB donation does not cause any inconvenience or

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  • Economic uncertainty and epistemic humility

    In the last six months I have heard that the current economic crisis proves that free market capitalism is a failure. I have also heard that it proves that government intervention is responsible for market booms and busts. I have read that the causes of the current crisis are greed, irrationality, easy money, low interest

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