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Doriane Lambelet Coleman
QUESTION: Should healthy minor children be used as organ donors for their ill siblings? -
Lee Baker
QUESTION: What's in a stereotype? -
Ruth Grant
QUESTION: Why don’t incentives always work? -
Kieran Healy
QUESTION: Should there be a market in human organs? -
William Darity, Jr.
QUESTION: How might social policies change as more Americans identify themselves as “multiracial”? -
Michael Valdez Moses
QUESTION: Can novels and films make us better people? -
Wayne Norman
QUESTION: Does competition bring out the worst in us? -
Victoria Szabo
QUESTION: What happens when we blur the line between what is virtual and what is real, and what are the dangers or opportunities in doing so? -
David Wong
QUESTION: There have been examples throughout history of "bad" people becoming "good," such as with the case of Oskar Schindler of Schindler's List fame. Are these anomalies or is there really such a thing as a "moral conversion"? If so, what makes it happen? -
Erika Weinthal
QUESTION: After a regional conflict, the management of natural resources is often in disarray. How can conflict-torn communities best recover? -
Leela Prasad
QUESTION: How do people decide what is the right thing to do in any given situation? -
Walter Sinnott-Armstrong
QUESTION: If a brain tumor leads a father to molest his daughter (an actual case), can he be held morally or legally responsible for his actions? -
About this Series
Intentionally or not, everyone “does” ethics, oftentimes extraordinarily well. All you have to do is wonder or argue about how to act, what lives to emulate or honor, or which obligations to embrace or ideals to pursue.







