Domácí porody
(2023)
Book Chapter
Baron, T. (2023). Domácí porody. In M. Chvílová Weberová, B. Steinlauf Vráblová, & J. Matějek (Eds.), Etika v Neonatologii a Pediatrii. Grada Publishing
All Outputs (23)
Teaching and knowledge: uneasy bedfellows (2023)
Journal Article
Fisher, A., & Tallant, J. (2023). Teaching and knowledge: uneasy bedfellows. Journal of Philosophy of Education, 58(1), 24-40. https://doi.org/10.1093/jopedu/qhad086In this paper we explore the connection between the act of teaching and the imparting of knowledge. Our overarching aim is to demonstrate that the connection between them is less tight than one might suppose. Our stepping off point is a recent paper... Read More about Teaching and knowledge: uneasy bedfellows.
Why-UD? Assessing the requirement to trial an intrauterine device as a condition for elective sterilisation in female patients (2023)
Journal Article
Baron, T. (2024). Why-UD? Assessing the requirement to trial an intrauterine device as a condition for elective sterilisation in female patients. Journal of Medical Ethics, 50(10), 708-711. https://doi.org/10.1136/jme-2023-109264Some National Health Service healthcare boards in the UK will approve a request for female sterilisation only if the patient first accepts a trial period of 1 year with an intrauterine device (IUD), a form of long-acting reversible contraception. In... Read More about Why-UD? Assessing the requirement to trial an intrauterine device as a condition for elective sterilisation in female patients.
Break the Long Lens of the Law! From Police Propaganda to Movement Media (2023)
Book Chapter
Duff, K. (2023). Break the Long Lens of the Law! From Police Propaganda to Movement Media. In The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy and Media Ethics. RoutledgeThis chapter explores ethical issues around the representation of policing and dissent. Iris Marion Young writes: ‘The philosopher is always socially situated, and if society is divided by oppressions, she either reinforces or struggles against them’... Read More about Break the Long Lens of the Law! From Police Propaganda to Movement Media.
The law and ethics of a property rights approach to frozen embryo disputes (2023)
Journal Article
Cornell, M., & Baron, T. (2024). The law and ethics of a property rights approach to frozen embryo disputes. Legal Studies, 44(2), 332-351. https://doi.org/10.1017/lst.2023.33Disputes over frozen embryos represent a particularly problematic case, legally and ethically, due to the ambiguity of their moral and legal status and the potential rights-claims which can be made with regard to them. Recent work has contextualised... Read More about The law and ethics of a property rights approach to frozen embryo disputes.
Phenomenological Interview and Gender Dysphoria: A Third Pathway for Diagnosis and Treatment (2023)
Journal Article
Dierckxsens, G., & R Baron, T. (2024). Phenomenological Interview and Gender Dysphoria: A Third Pathway for Diagnosis and Treatment. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 49(1), 28-42. https://doi.org/10.1093/jmp/jhad039Gender dysphoria (GD) is marked by an incongruence between a person's biological sex at birth, and their felt gender (or gender identity). There is continuing debate regarding the benefits and drawbacks of physiological treatment of GD in children, a... Read More about Phenomenological Interview and Gender Dysphoria: A Third Pathway for Diagnosis and Treatment.
The Route to Artificial Phenomenology; ‘Attunement to the World’ and Representationalism of Affective States (2023)
Book Chapter
Farina, L. (2023). The Route to Artificial Phenomenology; ‘Attunement to the World’ and Representationalism of Affective States. In C. Misselhorn, T. Poljanšek, T. Störzinger, & M. Klein (Eds.), Emotional Machines: Perspectives from Affective Computing and Emotional Human-Machine Interaction (111-132). Springer (part of Springer Nature). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-37641-3_5According to dominant views in affective computing, artificial systems e.g. robots and algorithms cannot experience emotion because they lack the phenomenological aspect associated with emotional experience. In this paper I suggest that if we wish to... Read More about The Route to Artificial Phenomenology; ‘Attunement to the World’ and Representationalism of Affective States.
Transformative experience and the principle of informed consent in medicine (2023)
Journal Article
Egerton, K., & Capitelli-McMahon, H. (2023). Transformative experience and the principle of informed consent in medicine. Synthese, 202(3), Article 65. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11229-023-04258-4This paper explores how transformative experience generates decision-making problems of particular seriousness in medical settings. Potentially transformative experiences are especially likely to be encountered in medicine, and the associated decisio... Read More about Transformative experience and the principle of informed consent in medicine.
Double‐donor surrogacy and the intention to parent (2023)
Journal Article
Baron, T. (2024). Double‐donor surrogacy and the intention to parent. Bioethics, 38(7), 609-615. https://doi.org/10.1111/bioe.13204Assisted reproduction often involves biological contributions by third parties such as egg/sperm donors, mitochondrial DNA donors, and surrogate mothers. However, these arrangements are also characterised by a biological relationship between the chil... Read More about Double‐donor surrogacy and the intention to parent.
Rights-based, worker-driven accountability in the fields: Contesting the uncontested contestable (2023)
Journal Article
Dillard, J., Shivji, A., & Bianchi, L. (2024). Rights-based, worker-driven accountability in the fields: Contesting the uncontested contestable. Critical Perspectives On Accounting, 99, Article 102646. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cpa.2023.102646We investigate the politicizing of migrant farmworkers’ rights regarding a fair and humane work environment using an agonistic-based critical dialogic accounting and accountability (CDAA) lens. The aim of CDAA is to employ accounting and accountabili... Read More about Rights-based, worker-driven accountability in the fields: Contesting the uncontested contestable.
Presentism: past and future (2023)
Book Chapter
Tallant, J., & Ingram, D. (2023). Presentism: past and future. In R. Lestienne, & P. A. Harris (Eds.), Time and Science. Volume 1: The Metaphysics of Time and Its Evolution (191-209). World Scientific. https://doi.org/10.1142/9781800613737_0007Let us begin with a quick primer of views in the philosophy of time. Consider an event that is past, such as Constantine being acclaimed Emperor at Eboracum, an event that is present, such as your reading of this paper, and an event that is future, s... Read More about Presentism: past and future.
Surrogacy and the Fiction of Medical Necessity (2023)
Journal Article
Baron, T. (2024). Surrogacy and the Fiction of Medical Necessity. Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, 33(1), 40-47. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0963180123000269A number of countries and states prohibit surrogacy except in cases of "medical necessity" or for those with specific medical conditions. Healthcare providers in some countries have similar policies restricting the provision of clinical assistance in... Read More about Surrogacy and the Fiction of Medical Necessity.
Diodorus Cronus on Present and Past Change (2023)
Journal Article
Duncombe, M. (2023). Diodorus Cronus on Present and Past Change. Journal of the History of Philosophy, 61(2), 167-192. https://doi.org/10.1353/hph.2023.0017Diodorus Cronus reportedly denied that there are truths about present kinēsis (change or movement) but affirmed that there are truths about past kinēsis. Although scholars have argued that Diodorus’s atomism about bodies, place, and time supports his... Read More about Diodorus Cronus on Present and Past Change.
Collateral Legal Consequences and Criminal Sentencing (2023)
Journal Article
Hoskins, Z. (2023). Collateral Legal Consequences and Criminal Sentencing. American Philosophical Quarterly, 60(2), 117-130. https://doi.org/10.5406/21521123.60.2.02A criminal conviction can trigger numerous burdensome legal consequences beyond the formal sentence. Some charge that these “collateral” legal consequences (CLCs) constitute additional measures of punishment, which raises the further question of whet... Read More about Collateral Legal Consequences and Criminal Sentencing.
Whose child is it anyway? (2023)
Newspaper / Magazine
Baron, T. (2023). Whose child is it anyway?
Transvaluation and The Practice of Metaphysics (2023)
Journal Article
Goodchild, P. (2023). Transvaluation and The Practice of Metaphysics. The Heythrop Journal, 64(3), 333-347. https://doi.org/10.1111/heyj.14191This article aims to develop transvaluation as a practice of metaphysical thinking. Jesus, Anselm, Nietzsche, and Deleuze have been selected and juxtaposed, for all their contrasts, as paradigmatic thinkers of transvaluation. Jesus offers the best pa... Read More about Transvaluation and The Practice of Metaphysics.
Guilty Pleas, Sentence Reductions, and Non-punishment of the Innocent (2023)
Book Chapter
Hoskins, Z. (2023). Guilty Pleas, Sentence Reductions, and Non-punishment of the Innocent. In J. V. Roberts, & J. Ryberg (Eds.), Sentencing the Self-Convicted: The Ethics of Pleading Guilty (51-70). Hart Publishing. https://doi.org/10.5040/9781509957460.ch-004I presented a previous draft of this paper at a workshop at Worcester College, Oxford, in March 2022. I am grateful for feedback from the participants at that event, and in particular to Antony Duff and Jesper Ryberg for helpful discussion at that e... Read More about Guilty Pleas, Sentence Reductions, and Non-punishment of the Innocent.
Fission, Self-Interest and Commonsense Ethics (2023)
Journal Article
Noonan, H. (2023). Fission, Self-Interest and Commonsense Ethics. Philosophia, https://doi.org/10.1007/s11406-023-00611-6Jacob Ross argues that the fission cases discussed in the personal identity literature cannot be accommodated without rejecting basic intuitions of everyday ethical thinking. He notes that many philosophers have responded to the challenge of fission... Read More about Fission, Self-Interest and Commonsense Ethics.
The Philosopher's Guide to Parenthood: Storks, Surrogates, and Stereotypes (2023)
Book
Baron, T. (2023). The Philosopher's Guide to Parenthood: Storks, Surrogates, and Stereotypes. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009299206
Naïve Realism, the Slightest Philosophy, and the Slightest Science (2023)
Book Chapter
French, C., & Phillips, I. (2023). Naïve Realism, the Slightest Philosophy, and the Slightest Science. In B. P. McLaughlin, & J. Cohen (Eds.), Contemporary Debates in the Philosophy of Mind (363-383). (2nd). Wiley-Blackwell