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Dive into the research topics where Jonathan Pugh is active.

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Featured researches published by Jonathan Pugh.


Protein & Cell | 2015

The moral imperative to continue gene editing research on human embryos

Julian Savulescu; Jonathan Pugh; Thomas Douglas; Christopher Gyngell

The publication of the first study to use gene editing techniques in human embryos (Liang et al., 2015) has drawn outrage from many in the scientific community. The prestigious scientific journals Nature and Science have published commentaries which call for this research to be strongly discouraged or halted all together (Lanphier et al., 2015; Baltimore et al., 2015). We believe this should be questioned. There is a moral imperative to continue this research.


Neuroethics | 2015

The ethics of deep brain stimulation for the treatment of anorexia nervosa

Hannah Maslen; Jonathan Pugh; Julian Savulescu

There is preliminary evidence, from case reports and investigational studies, to suggest that Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) could be used to treat some patients with Anorexia Nervosa (AN). Although this research is at an early stage, the invasive nature of the intervention and the vulnerability of the potential patients are such that anticipatory ethical analysis is warranted. In this paper, we first show how different treatment mechanisms raise different philosophical and ethical questions. We distinguish three potential mechanisms alluded to in the neuroscientific literature, relating to desire, control, and emotion, respectively. We explain why the precise nature of the mechanism has important implications for the patient’s autonomy and personal identity. In the second part of the paper, we consider practical dimensions of offering DBS to patients with AN in certain cases. We first discuss some limited circumstances where the mere offering of the intervention might be perceived as exerting a degree of coercive pressure that could serve to undermine the validity of the patient’s consent. Finally, we consider the implications of potential effects of DBS for the authenticity of the patient’s choice to continue using stimulation to ameliorate their condition.


European Psychiatry | 2017

Risk assessment tools in criminal justice and forensic psychiatry: The need for better data

Thomas Douglas; Jonathan Pugh; Illina Singh; Julian Savulescu; Seena Fazel

Violence risk assessment tools are increasingly used within criminal justice and forensic psychiatry, however there is little relevant, reliable and unbiased data regarding their predictive accuracy. We argue that such data are needed to (i) prevent excessive reliance on risk assessment scores, (ii) allow matching of different risk assessment tools to different contexts of application, (iii) protect against problematic forms of discrimination and stigmatisation, and (iv) ensure that contentious demographic variables are not prematurely removed from risk assessment tools.


Neuromodulation | 2018

Unexpected Complications of Novel Deep Brain Stimulation Treatments: Ethical Issues and Clinical Recommendations.

Hannah Maslen; Binith Cheeran; Jonathan Pugh; Laurie Pycroft; Sandra G.J. Boccard; Simon J. Prangnell; Alexander L. Green; James J. FitzGerald; Julian Savulescu; Tipu Z. Aziz

Innovative neurosurgical treatments present a number of known risks, the natures and probabilities of which can be adequately communicated to patients via the standard procedures governing obtaining informed consent. However, due to their novelty, these treatments also come with unknown risks, which require an augmented approach to obtaining informed consent.


Journal of Medical Ethics | 2016

Driven to extinction? The ethics of eradicating mosquitoes with gene-drive technologies

Jonathan Pugh

Mosquito-borne diseases represent a significant global disease burden, and recent outbreaks of such diseases have led to calls to reduce mosquito populations. Furthermore, advances in ‘gene-drive’ technology have raised the prospect of eradicating certain species of mosquito via genetic modification. This technology has attracted a great deal of media attention, and the idea of using gene-drive technology to eradicate mosquitoes has been met with criticism in the public domain. In this paper, I shall dispel two moral objections that have been raised in the public domain against the use of gene-drive technologies to eradicate mosquitoes. The first objection invokes the concept of the ‘sanctity of life’ in order to claim that we should not drive an animal to extinction. In response, I follow Peter Singer in raising doubts about general appeals to the sanctity of life, and argue that neither individual mosquitoes nor mosquitoes species considered holistically are appropriately described as bearing a significant degree of moral status. The second objection claims that seeking to eradicate mosquitoes amounts to displaying unacceptable degrees of hubris. Although I argue that this objection also fails, I conclude by claiming that it raises the important point that we need to acquire more empirical data about, inter alia, the likely effects of mosquito eradication on the ecosystem, and the likelihood of gene-drive technology successfully eradicating the intended mosquito species, in order to adequately inform our moral analysis of gene-drive technologies in this context.


Criminal Justice Ethics | 2016

Justifications for Non-Consensual Medical Intervention: From Infectious Disease Control to Criminal Rehabilitation

Jonathan Pugh; Thomas Douglas

A central tenet of medical ethics holds that it is permissible to perform a medical intervention on a competent individual only if that individual has given informed consent to the intervention. Yet it occasionally seems morally permissible to carry out non-consensual medical interventions on competent individuals for the purpose of infectious disease control (IDC). We describe two different moral frameworks that have been invoked in support of non-consensual IDC interventions and identify five desiderata that might be used to guide assessments of the moral permissibility of such interventions on either kind of fundamental justification. We then consider what these desiderata imply for the justifiability of carrying out non-consensual medical interventions that are designed to facilitate rehabilitation amongst serious criminal offenders. We argue that these desiderata suggest that a plausible case can be made in favor of such interventions.


The Journal of Ethics | 2013

Cohen’s Conservatism and Human Enhancement

Jonathan Pugh; Guy Kahane; Julian Savulescu

In an intriguing essay, G. A. Cohen has defended a conservative bias in favour of existing value. In this paper, we consider whether Cohen’s conservatism raises a new challenge to the use of human enhancement technologies. We develop some of Cohen’s suggestive remarks into a new line of argument against human enhancement that, we believe, is in several ways superior to existing objections. However, we shall argue that on closer inspection, Cohen’s conservatism fails to offer grounds for a strong sweeping objection to enhancement, and may even offer positive support for forms of enhancement that preserve valuable features of human beings. Nevertheless, we concede that Cohen’s arguments may suggest some plausible and important constraints on the modality of legitimate and desirable enhancements.


Journal of Medicine and Philosophy | 2015

Ravines and Sugar Pills: Defending Deceptive Placebo Use

Jonathan Pugh

In this paper, I argue that deceptive placebo use can be morally permissible, on the grounds that the deception involved in the prescription of deceptive placebos can differ in kind to the sorts of deception that undermine personal autonomy. In order to argue this, I shall first delineate two accounts of why deception is inimical to autonomy. On these accounts, deception is understood to be inimical to the deceived agent’s autonomy because it either involves subjugating the deceived agent’s will to another’s authority or because it precludes the agent from acting effectively in pursuit of their ends. I shall argue that providing an agent with false beliefs is not inimical to their autonomy if they are only able to effectively pursue their autonomously chosen ends by virtue of holding those particular false beliefs. Finally, I show that deceptive placebo use need only involve this latter sort of deception.


Ajob Neuroscience | 2015

Authenticity and the Stimulated Self: Neurosurgery for Anorexia Nervosa

Julian Savulescu; Hannah Maslen; Jonathan Pugh

Mueller et al. address a range of ethical considerations associated with neurosurgical interventions for the treatment of Anorexia Nervosa (AN), arguing for several protective measures to safeguard clinical research and practice. This is an important article, which provides a thorough review of current neurosurgical research and presents key insights into challenges associated with compromised decision-making capacities in the context of AN and the early average age of onset. We have argued elsewhere that further considerations relate to the ways in which the potential mechanisms deep brain stimulation (DBS) affect the patient’s desires, cognitive control and emotions, with distinct consequences for autonomy (these points are developed in Maslen et al. (under review)). In addition, as we will outline here, ethical analysis of DBS and ablative surgery for AN should explicitly address the authenticity of patients’ desires and experiences. Mueller et al. do consider the related issues of personality and identity. First, they suggest that, since it is not possible to adequately inform patients about the effects that psychiatric neurosurgery might have on their personality or identity, it might not be possible for patients to provide sufficiently informed consent to the procedure (17). Second, they point out that DBS might alter personality or identity when considering coercive interventions in adolescents, concluding that this constitutes one of two jointly-decisive reasons not to perform neurosurgery against the adolescent’s will. In this context, they hint at authenticity when they quote Charland’s claim that ‘many AN patients oscillate ambiguously between the view that anorexia is a part of their true self, and that it has completely taken over their self’(x). However, it is somewhat striking that they neither use nor examine the concept of authenticity. We describe the way this concept features in discussions of AN, and suggest that a deeper understanding of authenticity reveals further ethical problems that Mueller et al. do not consider. In this commentary, we focus on DBS as the neurosurgical intervention about which there is the most optimism in the context of AN treatment. We note that ablative surgery will raise other profound issues because they will not be reversible.


Journal of Medical Ethics | 2014

Coercive paternalism and back-door perfectionism

Jonathan Pugh

In this response piece, I argue that the ‘coercive paternalism’ that Sarah Conly endorses in her book Against Autonomy veers towards a back-door perfectionism. Although Conly points out that coercive paternalism does not mandate the imposition of alien values upon us in the same way that perfectionism does, I argue that coercive paternalism might yet impose an alien weighting of our own values; this, I suggest, means that coercive paternalism remains perfectionist in spirit, if not in letter. I go on to concede to Conly that coercive paternalism might be warranted in preventing actions that threaten health and that are only carried out on the basis of cognitive error. However, I conclude by claiming that we must take great care about what we presume that people are consuming only on the basis of cognitive error. More specifically, I suggest that it is crucial that we avoid defining our terms in such a manner that it becomes impossible for agents to choose some action that poses a risk to their health without them being accused of making a cognitive error in weighing their values in that way.

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