A New Edition of Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics Is Now Available

February 9, 2022

Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics (vol. 30, no. 4, 2021) is available online by subscription only.

Articles include:

  • “Socrates in the fMRI Scanner: The Neurofoundations of Morality and the Challenge to Ethics” by Jon Rueda 
  • “Well-Being After Severe Brain Injury: What Counts as Good Recovery?” by Mackenzie Graham and Lorina Naci 
  • “Trading Vulnerabilities: Living with Parkinson’s Disease before and after Deep Brain Stimulation” by Sara Goering, Anna Wexler and Eran Klein 
  • “The Birth of Naloxone: An Intellectual History of an Ambivalent Opioid” by Laura Kolbe and Joseph J. Fins 
  • “Goldwater After Trump” by Jacob M. Appel and Akaela Michels-Gualtieri 
  • “Cyberbiosecurity: An Emerging Field that has Ethical Implications for Clinical Neuroscience” by Dov Greenbaum 
  • “Closed-Loop Brain Devices in Offender Rehabilitation: Autonomy, Human Rights, and Accountability” by Sjors Ligthart, et al.
  • “Some Methodological Issues in Neuroethics: The Case of Responsibility and Psychopathy” by Luca Malatesti and John McMillan 
  • “Limitations Using Neuroimaging to Reconstruct Mental State After a Crime” by Michael J. Vitacco, et al.
  • “Lady Justice may be Blind, but is She Racist? Examining Brains, Biases, and Behaviors Using Neuro-Voir Dire” by Zaev D. Suskin