Service and Status Competition May Help Explain Perceived Ethical Acceptability

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 258-260
Author(s):  
Hugh Desmond
2021 ◽  
Vol 130 ◽  
pp. 104965
Author(s):  
Martin N. Muller ◽  
Drew K. Enigk ◽  
Stephanie A. Fox ◽  
Jordan Lucore ◽  
Zarin P. Machanda ◽  
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Author(s):  
Will G. Russell ◽  
Michelle Hegmon
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2005 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 566-574 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Litton ◽  
Franklin G. Miller

In the research ethics literature, there is strong disagreement about the ethical acceptability of placebo-controlled trials, particularly when a tested therapy aims to alleviate a condition for which standard treatment exists. Recently, this disagreement has given rise to debate over the moral appropriateness of the principle of clinical equipoise for medical research. Underlying these debates are two fundamentally different visions of the moral obligations that investigators owe their subjects.Some commentators and ethics documents claim that physicians, whether acting as care givers or researchers, have the same duty of beneficence towards their patients and subjects: namely, that they must provide optimal medical care. In discussing placebo surgery in research on refractory Parkinson's disease, Peter Clark succinctly states this view: “The researcher has an ethical responsibility to act in the best interest of subjects.”


Author(s):  
Andrew Power ◽  
Gráinne Kirwan

The development of a legal environment for virtual worlds presents issues of both law and ethics. The cross-border nature of online law and particularly law in virtual environments suggests that some lessons on its formation can be gained by looking at the development of international law, specifically the ideas of soft law and adaptive governance. In assessing the ethical implications of such environments the network of online regulations, technical solutions and the privatization of legal remedies offer some direction. While legal systems in online virtual worlds require development, the ethical acceptability of actions in these worlds is somewhat clearer, and users need to take care to ensure that their behaviors do not harm others.


2018 ◽  
pp. 369-392
Author(s):  
Richard H. McAdams

This paper examines the relationship between positive and normative economic theories of discrimination, that is, what discrimination is and why law should prohibit it. Prior economic scholarship has modelled discrimination as the result of (a) a taste for non-association; (b) statistically rational generalizations; and (c) group-based status competition. I examine these theories along with the psychological theory of implicit bias and other types of irrational stereotypes. For each positive theory, I explore the normative implications. The taste-based and statistical theories do not match well with antidiscrimination law, though the status theory potentially does.


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