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  • The moral imperative to research editing embryos: The need to modify Nature and Science

    Chris Gyngell and Julian Savulescu Human genetic modification has officially progressed from science fiction to science.  In a world first, scientists have used the gene editing technique CRISPR to modify human embryos. While the study itself marks an important milestone, the reason it is truly extraordinary is the scientific community’s reaction to it. In refusing…

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  • The Luck of Oskar Groening

    Oskar Groening – the so-called ‘Bookkeeper of Auschwitz’ who counted money taken from prisoners – is now on trial in Lueneberg. Some philosophers suggest that our moral assessment of people like Groening should take into account his ‘bad luck’ in having the opportunities he was offered to join the SS in 1942, and so on.

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  • Interview with Christine M. Korsgaard on Animal Ethics by Emilian Mihailov

    By Emilian Mihailov Cross posted on the CCEA blog   Why should animals have the same moral standing as humans? Ask yourself on what basis human beings claim to have moral standing.  I think the best way to understand this is in terms of the relation between something’s being good-for-someone and something’s being just plain…

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  • Born this way? How high-tech conversion therapy could undermine gay rights

    By Andrew Vierra, Georgia State University and Brian D Earp, University of Oxford This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article. Introduction Following the death of 17-year-old Leelah Alcorn, a transgender teen who committed suicide after forced “conversion therapy,” President Barack Obama called for a nationwide ban on psychotherapy aimed at changing sexual orientation…

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  • THE ETHICS OF EMBRYO EDITING

    Darlei Dall’Agnol  The British Parliament has, recently, passed Act 1990 making possible what is, misleadingly, called “three parents babies,” which will become law in October 2015. Thus, the UK is the first country to allow the transfer of genetic material from an embryo or an egg that has defects in the mitochondrial DNA to generate…

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  • A Challenge to Gun Rights

    Written By Professor Jeff McMahan   On this day in the US, around thirty people will be killed with a gun, not including suicides.  Many more will be wounded.  I can safely predict this number because that is the average number of homicides committed with a gun in the US each day.  Such killings have…

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  • Treatment for Crime Workshop (13th – 14th April) – Overview

    Practical ethicists have become increasingly interested in the potential applications of neurointerventions—interventions that exert a direct biological effect on the brain. One application of these interventions that has particularly stimulated moral discussion is the potential use of these interventions to prevent recidivism amongst criminal offenders. To a limited extent, we are already on the path…

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  • Sport hatred redux: Hating arch-rivals

    I am a Tottenham fan. (I accept your condolences.) One duty of a Tottenham fan is to hate Arsenal. And I am nothing if not a dutiful lad. Is such hatred justified?

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  • Is Sexual Offending Genetic?

    Do genes make sex offenders? Are rapists and child molesters driven by biology or environment? An article published last week in the International Journal of Epidemiology provides compelling evidence for a genetic component to risk of sexual offending.[1] The study found that sons or brothers of convicted sex offenders are 4 to 5 times more likely…

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  • Who Should be Allowed to Vote?

    Let us suppose that a jury has just reached a verdict on any case you can imagine (however trivial). Let us suppose that we discover one of the following three facts: The Ignorant Jury. The jury paid no attention to the trial; when asked how each of them found the defendant, they arbitrarily decided on…

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