Earlier this year, we shared the story of one family’s dispute over a loved one with dementia. That story, originally reported in The New York Times Magazine by Katie Engelhart, won the Pulitzer Prize for feature writing this past week. Today, we're revisiting Katie’s story – and the question at the heart of it: When cognitive decline changes people, should we respect their new desires?
Guest: Katie Engelhart, a contributing writer for The New York Times Magazine.
Background reading:
'The Interview': Robert Putnam Knows Why You’re Lonely
Loving Their Pets to Debt
72 Hours Inside Biden’s Campaign to Save His Candidacy
Why Britain Just Ended 14 Years of Conservative Rule
The Era of Killer Robots Is Here
The Supreme Court Is Not Done Remaking America
'Animal,' Episode 6: Bats
How Bad Is Drinking for You, Really?
Biden’s Slipping Support
The American Journalist on Trial in Russia
Trump Wins Broad Immunity
Will Biden Withdraw?
'Animal,' Episode 5: Wolves
'The Interview': Eddie Murphy Is Ready to Look Back
A Brutal Debate for Biden
The Doping Scandal Rocking the Upcoming Olympics
France’s Far Right at the Gates of Power
The Plan to Defeat Critics of Israel in Congress
The Army of Poets and Students Fighting a Forgotten War
'Animal,' Episode 4: Ferrets
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