ISSN 2150-7740 (Print); ISSN 2150-7759 (Online)
Publisher: Taylor and Francis Ltd
Editorial Board pp. i-i(1)
Ethics, Neuroimaging and Disorders of Consciousness: What Is the Question? pp. 1-2(2) Author: Monti, Martin M.
Assessing Decision-Making Capacity in the Behaviorally Nonresponsive Patient With Residual Covert Awareness pp. 3-14(12) Authors: Peterson, Andrew; Naci, Lorina; Weijer, Charles; Cruse, Damian; Fernández-Espejo, Davinia; Graham, Mackenzie; Owen, Adrian M.
Interface Cannot Replace Interlocution: Why the Reductionist Concept of Neuroimaging-Based Capacity Determination Fails pp. 15-17(3) Author: Jox, Ralf J.
“Popular Demand”—Constructing an Imperative for fMRI pp. 17-18(2) Author: Samuel, Gabrielle
Include Objective Quality-of-Life Assessments When Making Treatment Decisions With Patients Possessing Covert Awareness pp. 19-21(3) Authors: Klein, David Alan; Russell, Margaret
Medical Decision-Making Capacity: High Stakes, Complex, and Fluid pp. 21-22(2) Authors: Hardcastle, Valerie Gray; Stewart, Rosalyn W.
Capacity: About Autonomy or Authorization? pp. 23-23(1) Authors: Hynds, James A.; Dirksen, Kevin M.
Stable Value Sets, Psychological Well-Being, and the Disability Paradox: Ramifications for Assessing Decision-Making Capacity pp. 24-25(2) Author: Johnson, L. Syd M.
Conscientious of the Conscious: Interactive Capacity as a Threshold Marker for Consciousness pp. 26-33(8) Authors: Fischer, David B.; Truog, Robert D.
Prognosis Matters, Not Diagnosis pp. 34-35(2) Author: Glannon, Walter
Interactive Capacity, Decisional Capacity, and a Dilemma for Surrogates pp. 36-37(2) Author: Carbonell, Vanessa
Consciousness Is More Complicated Than That: Theoretical Limitations of Interactive Capacity pp. 38-39(2) Authors: Klincewicz, Michał; Frank, Lily
Interactive But Not Conscious; Conscious But Not Interactive: Lessons Learned From Slime Molds and Bartleby the Scrivener pp. 40-41(2) Author: Banja, John
Suffering in the Neurologically Devastated Patient pp. 42-43(2) Author: Rich, Ben A.
Autonomy in Neuroethics: Political and Not Metaphysical pp. 44-51(8) Author: Dubljević, Veljko
Having the Capacity for Autonomy Is Insufficient to Provide Meaningful Autonomy pp. 52-53(2) Authors: Felsen, Gidon; Reiner, Peter B.
Free Will Doesn't Come For Free pp. 53-54(2) Author: Levy, Neil
Compatibilism and a Political Conception of Autonomy pp. 55-56(2) Authors: Sharp, Daniel; Wasserman, David
The Illusion of Post Hoc Autonomy pp. 57-58(2) Author: Hui, Katrina
A Blurry Line Between Metaphysical Free Will and Autonomy in Addiction pp. 58-60(3) Author: van der Eijk, Yvette
Autonomy—A Genuinely Gradual Phenomenon pp. 60-61(2) Author: Nagel, Saskia K.
The Importance of the Self for Autonomous Behavior pp. 62-63(2) Authors: Horstkötter, Dorothee; Snoek, Anke
Autonomy, Free Will, and a Rational Life-Plan: A Practical Perspective pp. 64-65(2) Authors: Meynen, Gerben; Widdershoven, Guy
Free Will and Determinism: Political, Not Just Metaphysical pp. 65-67(3) Author: Johannsen, Kyle
The Metaphysical Assumptions Required for Political Autonomy pp. 67-69(3) Authors: Brewer, C. D.; Gascoigne, Jessica Morgan
Autonomy as a Negotiated Concept: The Case of Informed Consent pp. 69-70(2) Author: Dolan, Timothy
Autonomy as Free Will pp. 71-72(2) Author: Simkulet, William