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Objective Morality

What could be better to relaunch our new blog than a picture of my favourite socks? “Socks!?’, I hear you cry. But these are no ordinary socks. They are Soc. Soc. Socks, presented to me after not so long ago I was invited to participate in …

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Cross Post: What’s wrong with lying to a chatbot?

Written by Dominic Wilkinson, Consultant Neonatologist and Professor of Ethics, University of Oxford This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article. Imagine that you are on the …

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Cross Post: Spectator TV – Should the government ban smoking? With Kate Andrews and Dominic Wilkinson

Oxford Uehiro Centre’s Professor Dominic Wilkinson discusses the government’s proposal to ban smoking with The Spectator.

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AI Authorship: Responsibility is Not Required

This is the fifth in a series of blogposts by the members of the Expanding Autonomy project, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council. by Neil Levy AI is rapidly being adopted across all segments of academia (as it is across much …

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Political Campaigning, Microtargeting, and the Right to Information

Written by Cristina Voinea    2024 is poised to be a challenging year, partly because of the important elections looming on the horizon – from the United States and various European countries to Russia (though, let us admit, surprises there…

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Cross Post: Should A Health Professional Be Disciplined For Reporting An Illegal Abortion?

Written by: Prof Dominic Wilkinson, University of Oxford This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article. There have been several high-profile cases in the last year of women in …

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Expertise and Autonomy in Medical Decision Making

Written by Rebecca Brown. This is the fourth in a series of blogposts by the members of the Expanding Autonomy project, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council. This blog is based on a paper forthcoming in Episteme. The full text…

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Is There a Duty to Vote?

Written by Joseph Moore This new year is a presidential election year in my home country of the United States. And so, there is likely to be no shortage of U.S. political news and commentary surrounding candidates’ pasts, their present comm…

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Cross Post: Nudging for Better Beliefs

This is the third in a series of blogposts by the members of the Expanding Autonomy project, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council.   Written By: Oscar A. Piedrahita & Matthew Vermaire, COGITO, University of Glasgow. &…

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Medical assistance in dying: what are we talking about?

Alberto Giubilini Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics   Medical assistance in dying  – or “MAiD”,  to use the somehow infelicitous acronym – is likely to be a central topic in bioethics this year. That might not be tr…

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