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Found 5 stories matching "ethics" by keyword

Why and When Germline Editing is Permissible
Debating Contemporary Ethical Dilemmas

Why and When Germline Editing is Permissible

This article argues that gene editing for the purpose of curing or preventing serious disease can be morally acceptable, even when future children cannot consent, because parents already make many welfare-shaping decisions before children can exercise autonomy. It defends a cautious, regulated approach that permits therapeutic edits while rejecting cosmetic or preference-based genetic control that risks objectifying children, encouraging eugenics, and undermining their future moral personhood.

Vold Cao Jun 10, 2026
In-vitro Meat and a Relational Argument For Meat as "Morally Permissible Moral Mistakes"
Debating Contemporary Ethical Dilemmas

In-vitro Meat and a Relational Argument For Meat as "Morally Permissible Moral Mistakes"

This article argues that in-vitro meat is ethically preferable to ordinary meat because it avoids killing animals while preserving many of the cultural and dietary functions of meat. It defends a relation-based approach to food ethics, claiming that ordinary meat-eating may be "suberogatory" or a morally permissible moral mistake, while lab-grown meat offers a realistic path toward reducing animal suffering, environmental harm, and unfair demands on people with limited dietary options.

Vold Cao Jun 09, 2026
The Ethics of Digital Replicas of the Deceased
Debating Contemporary Ethical Dilemmas

The Ethics of Digital Replicas of the Deceased

This article argues that creating AI replicas of the deceased is morally impermissible, even when the person gave prior consent, because it commodifies human identity and reduces moral personhood into a commercial data product. It further contends that digital afterlife systems threaten relational privacy, expose secrets without meaningful agency or context, and risk causing deep psychological and social harm to the living.

Douglas Bai | ChatGPT Jun 09, 2026
Why Salacious Gossiping Is Wrong
Debating Contemporary Ethical Dilemmas

Why Salacious Gossiping Is Wrong

This article argues that sexually salacious gossip is morally wrong because it violates privacy, relational trust, and the implicit duties created by intimate relationships. It examines whether truthfulness, sexual content, revenge, and comparisons to celebrity gossip affect the moral status of disclosure, concluding that Jones has a duty not to share Alice’s intimate information without consent.

Vold Cao Jun 09, 2026