There is growing research interest in the prevalence of moral injury – a profound psychological harm caused by judgments which deviate from what an individual or society views as “right” – among those who have been exposed to trauma, such as veterans and survivors of abuse. However, what makes a judgment “moral”? Philosophers have long […]
In John Scalzi’s sci-fi novel Old Man’s War, soldiers receive the BrainPal, a neural interface that boosts thinking and connects them to computer assistants. Sounds far-fetched? Perhaps not for long. Military neuroenhancement may be closer than we think. An AI-assisted closed-loop brain-computer interface, or AI-BCI, could be a breakthrough tool to upgrade warfighters. But while […]
This editorial appears in the September 2025 issue of the American Journal of Bioethics As much as humans yearn for definitive right answers and obvious distinctions between right and wrong, very little in life is black and white. Intolerance of uncertainty and need for cognitive closure often leads us to construct and then defend artificial certainty that […]
A decade ago, we wrote an AJOB blog post critiquing the then-new medical drama Chicago Med. We took the pilot to task for its lack of verisimilitude, despite the myriad ethical issues highlighted in that episode. We watched the show with some regularity for a few seasons but eventually lost interest as the show veered […]
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