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Brian D Earp

Centre for Biomedical Ethics, National University of Singapore Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, Singapore.

7 papers in the library · 114 citations · publishing 2022-2026

Papers

Ethical Issues Regarding Nonsubjective Psychedelics as Standard of Care.

Cambridge quarterly of healthcare ethics : CQ : the international journal of healthcare ethics committees October 1, 2022 David B Yaden, Brian D Earp, Roland R Griffiths 31 citations

Psychedelics partly achieve their therapeutic effects through the subjective experiences they produce and how individuals interpret those experiences. Because these subjective effects can be disturbing for people with certain mental illnesses, researchers are developing 'nonsubjective' psychedelics that cause similar biological changes without the characteristic subjective effects. The authors broadly support creating such substances for scientific and clinical reasons but argue they should be reserved only for cases where subjective effects are specifically contraindicated. Classic psychedelics that produce subjective experiences should remain the default standard of care, as withholding typically positive, meaningful, and therapeutic experiences from most patients raises ethical concerns.

Distinctive But Not Exceptional: The Risks of Psychedelic Ethical Exceptionalism.

The American journal of bioethics : AJOB January 1, 2025 Katherine Cheung, Brian D Earp, Kyle Patch et al. 30 citations

The authors argue against the idea that psychedelics raise uniquely exceptional ethical issues in clinical medicine, comparing this position to earlier debates about genetic exceptionalism in bioethics. They contend that psychedelics share more commonalities with existing medical interventions than is often assumed, and that adopting a stance of "psychedelic ethical exceptionalism" carries risks. Instead, they propose that consistent ethical rules and evidentiary standards should apply across all relevant areas of clinical medicine. While changes to existing standards may be warranted, such changes should not be justified by appealing to the alleged uniqueness of psychedelics.

Psychedelics, Meaningfulness, and the "Proper Scope" of Medicine: Continuing the Conversation.

Cambridge quarterly of healthcare ethics : CQ : the international journal of healthcare ethics committees June 27, 2023 Katherine Cheung, Kyle Patch, Brian D Earp et al. 27 citations

Psychedelics like psilocybin produce altered states of consciousness that change perception, cognition, and affect. They show promise as therapeutic agents combined with talk therapy for conditions such as major depression and substance use disorder. It remains unclear whether these acute subjective effects are necessary for therapeutic benefits. This uncertainty has sparked debate about whether psychedelics without subjective effects could still have therapeutic impact, or whether the subjective effects are essential for full therapeutic realization.

Strong Bipartisan Support for Controlled Psilocybin Use as Treatment or Enhancement in a Representative Sample of US Americans: Need for Caution in Public Policy Persists

AJOB Neuroscience February 5, 2024 Julian D Sandbrink, Kyle Johnson, Maureen Gill et al. 13 citations

A nationally representative sample of 795 US Americans rated the moral status of psilocybin use in a licensed setting as morally positive for both treating a psychiatric condition and enhancing well-being, showing strong bipartisan support. These attitudes can inform policy-making around supervised psilocybin use. The study did not explore attitudes toward unsupervised or non-licensed use.

Moral enhancement and cheapened achievement: Psychedelics, virtual reality and AI.

Bioethics March 1, 2025 Emma C Gordon, Katherine Cheung, Julian Savulescu et al. 8 citations

A common objection to cognitive or athletic enhancement is that using drugs or technologies to improve performance 'cheapens' the resulting achievement. This paper extends that objection to moral enhancement—using biotechnology to become a morally better person. The authors argue that if the cheapened-achievement objection holds for cognitive or athletic enhancement, it can also apply to some forms of moral enhancement, but not all. Highly speculative or determinative technologies might diminish the value of moral self-improvement. However, more practical forms—where drugs or technologies play an adjunctive or facilitative role, such as psychedelics in moral learning, 'Socratic AI,' or empathy enhancement via virtual reality—largely evade the objection, assuming those technologies work as intended. The most promising forms of moral enhancement thus avoid a leading critique of other enhancements.

Valuing the Acute Subjective Experience

Perspectives in biology and medicine January 1, 2024 Katherine Cheung, Brian D Earp, David B Yaden 5 citations

A psychedelic experience might be valuable in itself, not just for its lasting therapeutic benefits. Using the concept of psychological richness and ideas from aesthetics and enhancement philosophy, this essay argues that the acute subjective experience can be a source of value independent of any persisting positive effects.

Analyzing the concept of independence in psychedelic research.

Accountability in research May 1, 2026 Katherine Cheung, Rebecca Ehrenkranz, Brian D Earp et al.

Several proposals across fields suggest including independent actors in research to manage bias, such as independent auditors for adverse events in psychedelic science or independent researchers in trial teams. However, the concept of independence is often undefined. While introducing independent actors seems beneficial for reducing bias and improving rigor, it may also have significant drawbacks. The authors argue that the implicit sense of independence is freedom from influences that could reduce the trustworthiness or accuracy of findings. They explore whether such actors can be identified without trade-offs with other scientific goals, like expertise. Two models from law and science are offered to guide incorporation of independent actors.