135 | -- | 137 | George R. Hoffmann. Letter to the editor on ethics of expertise, informed consent, and hormesis |
139 | -- | 145 | Edward J. Calabrese. Elliott's Ethics of Expertise Proposal and Application: A Dangerous Precedent |
147 | -- | 157 | Jessica S. Ancker, Annette Flanagin. A comparison of conflict of interest policies at peer-reviewed journals in different scientific disciplines |
159 | -- | 169 | Jeffrey Kovac. Moral Rules, Moral Ideals, and Use-Inspired Research |
171 | -- | 189 | Michael Davis. Eighteen rules for writing a code of professional ethics |
191 | -- | 193 | Livia Puljak. Croatia founded a national body for ethics in science |
195 | -- | 220 | Timothy N. Atkinson, Diane S. Gilleland. Virtue blindness and hegemony: qualitative evidence of negotiated ethical frameworks in the social language of university research administration |
221 | -- | 233 | Barbro Björkman. Different types - Different rights - Distinguishing between different perspectives on ownership of biological material |
235 | -- | 248 | Mark Coeckelbergh, Ger Wackers. Imagination, distributed responsibility and vulnerable technological systems: the case of Snorre A |
249 | -- | 264 | Sean T. Powell, Matthew A. Allison, Michael W. Kalichman. Effectiveness of a responsible conduct of research course: a preliminary study |
265 | -- | 273 | James A. Stieb. On "Bettering Humanity" in Science and Engineering Education |
275 | -- | 277 | Katinka Waelbers. Peter-Paul Verbeek, What Things Do: Philosophical Reflections on Technology, Agency and Design - The Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park, Pennsylvania, 2005, Paperback, £16.95, $25.00, ISBN-10: 0271025409, ISBN-13: 978-0271025407, Hardback, £50.95, ISBN-10: 0271025395, ISBN-13: 978-0271025391 |