Provides educational information at the intersection of law, medicine, and ethics. Also provides information about two nationally acclaimed peer-reviewed journals.
The American Society of Law, Medicine, and Ethics
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Suffering Is Not Useless
This editorial appears in the August 2025 issue of the American Journal of Bioethics Echoing Ruth Macklin’s classic essay which challenged the assumption that dignity is a useful concept for bioethics, Nelson et al. offer a provocation regarding the concept of suffering. Is suffering useful? Like Macklin, Nelson et al. claim that concepts taken to be self-evident may […]
What Should Have Happened in the Tragic Case of Adriana Smith?
What should have happened in the tragic case of Adriana Smith, the two-months-pregnant woman who was declared brain dead but has been on life support since February at Emory Hospital in Atlanta, so that her baby might eventually be delivered by C-section? The hospital refused to let her die, concerned it would violate Georgia’s abortion […]
The Adriana Smith Case Unfolding in Atlanta Raises Many Questions
The widely discussed Adriana Smith case unfolding in Atlanta raises many thorny ethical questions. Despite the case’s high profile, the facts about what happened that led to a situation in which Emory University Hospital Midtown plans to deliver a fetus from a woman who has been dead for months, via C-section in August, are murky. […]
America Needs a Marshall Plan for Saving the Future of Science
At the end of World War Two, most of Europe lay in ruins. The Nazis had been defeated but at a terrible price to both the allied nations and the axis powers, including Germany. A former U.S. ally, the Soviet Union, had emerged as a dangerous threat to Europe. On June 5, 1947, in a […]