Readings: Borges and I; Full-body illusions and minimal phenomenal selfhood; Identity, Self-Awareness, and Self-Deception: Ethical Implications for Leaders and Organizations; Individuals are Inadequate: Recognizing the Family-Centeredness of Chinese Bioethics and Chinese Health System; Body Modification: An Introduction; Confounding Extremities: Surgery at the Medico-ethical Limits of Self-Modification; Should we prevent non-therapeutic mutilation and extreme body modification?; Nonmainstream Body Modification- Genital Piercing, Branding, Burning, and Cutting; Anchoring the (Postmodern) Self?: Body modification, fashion, and identity; Bodyworlds: The Art of Plastinated Cadavers; Bodyworlds and the ethics of using human remains: a preliminary discussion; What Should We Do about Eduard Pernkopf’s Atlas?; Fear; A Method for Evaluating the Ethics of Fear Appeals; Does fear of retaliation deter requests for ethics consultation?; The Two Faces of Fear: A History of Hard-Hitting Public Health Campaigns Against Tobacco and AIDS; Professor Nobody’s Little Lectures on Supernatural Horror; Bioethics as Politics; ‘Fat Ethics’: The Obesity Discourse and Body Politics; HB 481; A Man, Burning: Communicative Suffering and the Ethics of Images; Health and Urban Living; Urban Bioethics: Adapting Bioethics to the Urban Context; The Experience of Living in Cities; From the Urban to the Civic: The Moral Possibilities of the City; The Last Messiah; Why It Is Better Never to Come into Existence; Every Conceivable Harm: A Further Defence of Anti-Natalism; The Ethics of Procreation and Adoption; Neuroethics and the Problem of Other Minds: Implications of Neuroscience for the Moral Status of Brain-Damaged Patients and Nonhuman Animals; Undocumented Patients: Undocumented Immigrants and Access to Health Care; Bioethics and International Human Rights; Against culturally sensitive bioethics; 2019 State of the State; Michigan Health Policy for the Incoming 2019 Gubernatorial Administration; ACA Exchange Competitiveness in Michigan; Flint Water Crisis: What Happened and Why?; The Neurobiology of Love; The Medicalization of Love; Self-Transcendence, the True Self, and Self-Love; Love yourself: The relationship of the self with itself in popular self-help texts; Having Children: Reproductive Ethics in the Face of Overpopulation; The Ethics of Controlling Population Growth in the Developing World; Overpopulation and the Threat of Ecological Disaster: The Need for Global Bioethics; Threats and burdens: Challenging scarcity-driven narratives of “overpopulation”; The right to public health; Ethics and Public Health: Forging a Strong Relationship; Old Myths, New Myths: Challenging Myths in Public Health; A Bridge Back to the Future: Public Health Ethics, Bioethics, and Environmental Ethics; The Solitude of Self; An overview of systematic reviews on the public health consequences of social isolation and loneliness; Individual Good and Common Good: A Communitarian Approach to Bioethics; Solitude: An Exploration of Benefits of Being Alone; Social Responsibilities of Bioethics; The Concept of Responsibility: Three Stages in Its Evolution within Bioethics; Bioethics for Whom?; Towards an Ethics of Blame; Bioethics and History; The History of Bioethics: Its Rise and Significance; What can History do for Bioethics?; “My Story Is Broken; Can You Help Me Fix It?”: Medical Ethics and the Joint Construction of Narrative