Faculty of Philosophy

Oxford is one of the world's great centres for philosophy. More than one hundred and fifty professional philosophers work in the University and its colleges, between them covering a vast range of subjects within philosophy. Many are international leaders in their fields. The Faculty of Philosophy is one of the largest departments of philosophy in the world, and is widely recognized to be amongst the best.
Its reputation draws many distinguished visiting philosophers; each year around fifty philosophers from around the world give lectures or seminars in Oxford. Almost every major philosopher speaks in Oxford at some time.
Each year, more than five hundred undergraduates are admitted to study philosophy in Oxford, always in combination with another subject. The Faculty also has more than a hundred graduate students, who are either taking a taught graduate degree or working for a doctorate.
Oxford is a collegiate university, and every registered student becomes a member of one of the colleges. In this way, he or she has access, not only to the very extensive libraries and facilities of the University, but also to the varied and more intimate life of a college. Colleges offer their students excellent libraries and facilities of their own.
Teaching at Oxford is by lectures and seminars, and by tutorials or supervisions. Courses of lectures and seminars are offered on a very large range of topics, for both undergraduates and graduates. Tutorials are a special feature of Oxford; undergraduates receive regular and frequent tutorials either individually or in pairs from members of the Faculty. All graduate students also receive frequent individual supervisions.
Oxford University dates from the 12th Century or before. The first colleges were founded in the 13th Century. The ancient buildings remain, mingled with magnificent architecture from subsequent centuries, to make Oxford one of the most inspiring and beautiful cities in the world. Within this setting, Oxford remains at the forefront of philosophy.
Series associated with Faculty of Philosophy
# | Episode Title | Description | People | Date | |
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533 | 2e. Artificial Intelligence and the news | Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, gives the fifth talk in the second Ethics in AI seminar, held on January 27th 2020 (postponed from December 2nd 2019). | Rasmus Kleis Nielsen | 27 Jan 2020 | |
532 | 2d. Computational propaganda | Vidya Narayanan, Oxford Internet Institute, | Vidya Narayanan | 27 Jan 2020 | |
531 | 2c. Use, users and the social context for AI | Gina Neff, Oxford Internet Institute, gives the third talk in the second Ethics in AI seminar, held on January 27th 2020 (postponed from December 2nd 2019). | Gina Neff | 27 Jan 2020 | |
530 | 2b. Capital, labour and power in the age of automation | Carl Benedikt Frey gives the second talk in the second Ethics in AI seminar, held on January 27th 2020 (postponed from December 2nd 2019). | Carl Benedikt Frey | 27 Jan 2020 | |
529 | 2a. AI Governance and Ethics | Allan Dafoe and Carina Prunkl, Future of Humanity Institute, Faculty of Philosophy give the first talk in the second Ethics in AI seminar, held on January 27th 2020 (postponed from December 2nd 2019). | Allan Dafoe, Carina Prunkl | 27 Jan 2020 | |
528 | A discussion of ethical challenges posed by AI, involving experts from fields across Oxford - Seminar 1 | An introduction by Professor Sir Nigel Shadbolt; The place of Ethics in AI, AI Ethics and legal regulation, Ethics of AI in healthcare | Tom Douglas, Carissa Véliz, Vicki Nash, Sandra Wachter | 20 Jan 2020 | |
527 | Creative Commons | Hornless Cattle - is Gene Editing the Best Solution? | In this talk, Prof. Peter Sandøe argues that, from an ethical viewpoint, gene editing is the best solution to produce hornless cattle. There are, however, regulatory hurdles. | Peter Sandøe | 02 Dec 2019 |
526 | Creative Commons | Blockchain, consent and prosent for medical research | Respecting patients' autonomy is increasingly important in the digital age, yet researchers have raised concerns over the barriers of access to medical data useful for data-driven medical research. | Sebastian Porsdam Mann | 13 Nov 2019 |
525 | 1h. Ethics of AI in healthcare | Jess Morley, Oxford Internet Institute, gives the eigth talk in the first Ethics in AI seminar, held on November 11th 2019. | Jess Morley | 11 Nov 2019 | |
524 | 1g. Ethics and AI at the Oxford Big Data Institute | Gil McVean, Big Data Institute, gives the seventh talk in the first Ethics in AI seminar, held on November 11th 2019. | Gil McVean | 11 Nov 2019 | |
523 | 1f. Re-uniting ethics and the law for AI | Brent Mittelstadt, Oxford Internet Institute, gives the sixth talk in the first Ethics in AI seminar, held on November 11th 2019. | Brent Mittelstadt | 11 Nov 2019 | |
522 | 1e. When AI disrupts the law | Sandra Wachter, Oxford Internet Institute, gives the fifth talk in the first Ethics in AI seminar, held on November 11th 2019. | Sandra Wachter | 11 Nov 2019 | |
521 | 1d. AI ethics and legal regulation | Vicki Nash, Oxford Internet Institute gives the fourth talk in the first Ethics in AI seminar, held on November 11th 2019. | Vicki Nash | 11 Nov 2019 | |
520 | 1c. AI-ethics research at the Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics, Faculty of Philosophy | Tom Douglas, Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics, Faculty of Philosophy gives the third talk in the first Ethics in AI seminar, held on November 11th 2019. | Tom Douglas | 11 Nov 2019 | |
519 | 1b. The place of philosophy in the ethics of AI | Carissa Véliz, Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics, gives the second talk in the first Ethics in AI seminar, held on November 11th 2019. | Carissa Véliz | 11 Nov 2019 | |
518 | 1a. Background and Aims of the Institute for Ethics in AI | Nigel Shadbolt, Principal of Jesus College, Department of Computer Science, gives the first talk in the first Ethics in AI seminar, held on November 11th 2019. | Nigel Shadbolt | 11 Nov 2019 | |
517 | Creative Commons | Genetic Selection and Enhancement | Professor Julian Savulescu and Dr Katrien Devolder discuss the use of genetic testing to select which children to bring into the world. | Julian Savulescu, Katrien Devolder | 04 Nov 2019 |
516 | Creative Commons | 2019 Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics (3/3): Improving Political Discourse (2): Communicating moral concern beyond blaming and shaming | Lies, propaganda, and fake news have hijacked political discourse, distracting the electorate from engaging with the global problems we face. These Uehiro Lectures suggest a pathway for democratic institutions to devise solutions to the problems we face t | Elizabeth Anderson | 17 Oct 2019 |
515 | Creative Commons | 2019 Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics (2/3): Improving Political Discourse (1): Re-learning how to talk about facts across group identities | Lies, propaganda, and fake news have hijacked political discourse, distracting the electorate from engaging with the global problems we face. These Uehiro Lectures suggest a pathway for democratic institutions to devise solutions to the problems we face t | Elizabeth Anderson | 17 Oct 2019 |
514 | Creative Commons | 2019 Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics (1/3): What Has Gone Wrong? Populist politics and the mobilization of fear and resentment | Lies, propaganda, and fake news have hijacked political discourse, distracting the electorate from engaging with the global problems we face. These Uehiro Lectures suggest a pathway for democratic institutions to devise solutions to the problems we face. | Elizabeth Anderson | 17 Oct 2019 |
513 | From Eugenics to Human Gene Editing: Engineering Life in China in a Global Context | In November 2018, a Chinese scientist announced the birth of the world’s first gene-edited babies and sparked outrage across the world. Professor Nie considers how China's complex socio-ethical approach paved the way for this controversial experiment. | Jing-Bao Nie | 07 Oct 2019 | |
512 | Creative Commons | Freedom of Political Communication, Propaganda and the Role of Epistemic Institutions in Cyberspace | Professor Seumas Miller defines fake news, hate speech and propaganda, discusses the relationship between social media and political propaganda. | Seumas Miller | 20 Jun 2019 |
511 | One Minute in Haditha: Neuroscience, Emotion and Military Ethics | In this special lecture, Professor Mitt Regan discusses the latest research in moral perception and judgment, and the potential implications of this research for ethics education in general and military ethics training in particular. | Mitt Regan | 19 Jun 2019 | |
510 | Creative Commons | Religion, War and Terrorism | In this New St Cross Special Ethics Seminar, Professor Tony Coady argues that religion does not have an inherent tendency towards violence, including particularly war and terrorism. | Professor Tony Coady | 01 May 2019 |
509 | Creative Commons | The Ethics of Stress, Resilience, and Moral Injury Among Police and Military Personnel | Professor Seumas Miller sets out how the use of lethal and coercive forces may erode moral character and cause moral injury. | Seumas Miller | 26 Mar 2019 |
508 | Is there a Moral Problem with the Gig Economy? | Is 'gig work' exploitative and injust? In this New St Cross Special Ethics Seminar, Daniel Halliday examines the common concerns from an ethical perspective. | Daniel Halliday | 04 Mar 2019 | |
507 | Creative Commons | The Salvation Agenda: The Politics of Medical Humanitarianism During Zimbabwe's Cholera Outbreak 2008/09 | In this New St Cross Special Ethics Seminar, Simukai Chigudu examines the humanitarian politics of responding to the most catastrophic cholera outbreak in African history. | Simukai Chigudu | 12 Feb 2019 |
506 | Creative Commons | Rationing antibiotics in the face of drug resistance: ethical challenges, principles and pathways | Practical medical ethics symposium: Rationing responsibly in an age of austerity | Christian Munthe | 22 Nov 2018 |
505 | Allocating organs: the US approach | Practical medical ethics symposium: Rationing responsibly in an age of austerity. | Thaddeus Mason Pope | 22 Nov 2018 | |
504 | Creative Commons | Cost-equivalence: rethinking treatment allocation | Practical medical ethics symposium: Rationing responsibly in an age of austerity | Julian Savulescu | 22 Nov 2018 |
503 | Creative Commons | Moralising medicine: is it ethical to allocate treatment based on responsibility for illness? | Practical medical ethics symposium: Rationing responsibly in an age of austerity | Rebecca Brown | 22 Nov 2018 |
502 | Creative Commons | Allocating intensive care beds and balancing ethical values | Practical medical ethics symposium: Rationing responsibly in an age of austerity | Dominic Wilkinson | 22 Nov 2018 |
501 | Political Bioethics | How should members of a liberal democratic political community, open to value pluralism, decide bioethical issues that generate deep disagreement? | Benjamin Gregg | 06 Nov 2018 | |
500 | Global Legal Epidemiology: Developing a Science Around Whether, When and How International Law Can Address Global Challenges | Professor Steven Hoffman discusses legal mechanisms available for coordinating international responses to transnational problems, their prospects, and their challenges. | Steven J Hoffman | 23 Oct 2018 | |
499 | Fake News and the Politics of Truth | Fake news spread online is a clear danger to democratic politics. One aspect of that danger is obvious: it spreads misinformation. But other aspects, less often discussed, is that it also spreads confusion and undermines trust. | Michael Lynch | 08 Oct 2018 | |
498 | Minds Without Spines: Toward a More Comprehensive Animal Ethics | In this OUC-WEH Joint Seminar, Irina Mikhalevich argues that the moral status of invertebrate animals is often overlooked, and sets out why animal ethics should be more inclusive and comprehensive. | Irina Mikhalevich | 19 Jun 2018 | |
497 | Rethinking 'Disease': A Fresh Diagnosis and a New Philosophical Treatment | In this OUC-WEH Joint Seminar, Russell Powell explores the concept of 'disease' | Russell Powell | 19 Jun 2018 | |
496 | Cost-benefit analysis | In this special lecture, Professor Matt Adler argues that social welfare function is a better methodology than cost-benefit analysis. | Professor Matthew Adler | 11 Jun 2018 | |
495 | Sleep softly: Ethics, Schubert and the value of dying well | An inter-disciplinary collaboration on music, mortality and ethics. | Dominic Wilkinson | 08 Jun 2018 | |
494 | 2018 Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics (3/3): Illness and Attitude | Lecture 3 of 3.Who we are depends in part on the social world in which we live. In these lectures I look at some consequences for three mental health problems, broadly construed: dementia, addiction, and psychosomatic illness. | Richard Holton | 05 Jun 2018 | |
493 | 2018 Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics (2/3): Addiction, Desire and the Polluted Environment | Lecture 2 of 3. Who we are depends in part on the social world in which we live. In these lectures I look at some consequences for three mental health problems, broadly construed: dementia, addiction, and psychosomatic illness. | Richard Holton | 05 Jun 2018 | |
492 | 2018 Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics (1/3): Dementia and the Social Scaffold of Memory | Lecture 1 of 3. Who we are depends in part on the social world in which we live. In these lectures I look at some consequences for three mental health problems, broadly construed: dementia, addiction, and psychosomatic illness. | Richard Holton | 05 Jun 2018 | |
491 | The Future of Mobility: How and why will we transport ourselves in the next decades | Digitisation has entered the mobility arena. The car has evolved from a mechanical device into a “data producing embedded software platform”, and the internet is quickly linking the supply and demand to effectively fulfil our transport needs. | Carlo van de Weijer | 21 May 2018 | |
490 | Modal Epistemology and the Formal Identity of Intellect and Object | A defence of the Formal Identity Thesis and of the immateriality of the human intellect, based on specifically epistemological arguments about our knowledge of necessary or essential truths, including especially essential truths about value. | Robert Koons | 27 Feb 2018 | |
489 | Hylomorphism, natural science, mind and God | Howard Robinson argues that the early moderns were right to think that Aristotelian or scholastic hylomorphism was inconsistent with modern science. | Howard Robinson | 27 Feb 2018 | |
488 | Dependent Powerful Qualities and Grounded Downward Causation | David Yates argues that some physically realised qualitative properties have their causal roles solely in virtue of being the qualities they are, and not in virtue of the powers bestowed by their physical realizers on a given occasion. | David yates | 27 Feb 2018 | |
487 | A Biologically Informed Hylomorphism | Utilising recent advances in developmental biology, Christopher Austin argues that the hylomorphic framework is an empirically adequate and conceptually rich explanatory schema with which to model the nature of organisms. | Christopher J Austin | 27 Feb 2018 | |
486 | Hylomorphic Structure, Emergence, and Supervenience | William Jaworski argues why the hylomorphic structure is the best (and perhaps only) thing that can explain the persistence of individuals that change their matter over time. | William Jaworski | 27 Feb 2018 | |
485 | Brain-machine interfaces and the translation of thought into action | In this St Cross Special Ethics Seminar, Dr Tom Buller reflects on the causal relationship between movement goals and bodily awareness and challenges the idea that BMI-enabled movement and intentional bodily movement are equal actions. | Tom Buller | 19 Feb 2018 | |
484 | Creative Commons | Collective inaction and group-based ignorance | In this St Cross Special Ethics Seminar, Anne Schwenkebecher discusses morally wrongful collective inaction and the problem of group-based ignorance. | Anne Schwekenbecher | 06 Feb 2018 |
483 | 2017 Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics (3/3) Obligations to the Needy: Some Empirical Worries and Uncomfortable Philosophical Possibilities | In this final lecture, Professor Temkin considers possible negative impacts of global efforts to aid the needy, and reviews the main claims and arguments of all three Lectures | Larry Temkin | 13 Nov 2017 | |
482 | 2017 Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics (2/3) Obligations to the Needy: Singer’s Pond Example versus Supporting International Aid Organizations—Some Disanalogies and Their Normative Significance | In this second lecture, Professor Temkin considers some disanalogies between saving a drowning child and giving to an aid organization, and discusses the issues of corruption and poor governance. | Larry Temkin | 13 Nov 2017 | |
481 | 2017 Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics (1/3) Obligations to the Needy: Effective Altruism, Pluralism, and Singer’s Pond Example | In this first lecture, Larry Temkin explores different philosophical approaches to aiding the needy, and how they may fit with Peter Singer's famous Pond Example thought experiment. | Larry Temkin | 13 Nov 2017 | |
480 | Sacred Values and the Sanctity of Life | OUC-Ethox Seminar. Steve Clarke discusses Ronald Dworkin's account of sacred values in his work 'Life's Dominion' and furthers the argument that the assertion 'life is sacred' is tenable by both liberals and conservatives. | Steve Clarke | 13 Nov 2017 | |
479 | On Moral Experts | A St Cross Special Ethics Seminar. Professor John-Stewart Gordon focusses on the question of whether moral experts must follow their own expert advice in order to remain experts. | John-Stewart Gordon | 13 Nov 2017 | |
478 | 2015 Uehiro Lectures: Reasons to Worry | The second of the three 2015 Annual Uehiro Lectures 'Why Worry About Future Generations'. Why should we care about what happens to human beings in the future, after we ourselves are long gone? | Samuel Scheffler | 06 Nov 2017 | |
477 | 2015 Uehiro Lectures: Conservatism, Temporal Bias, and Future Generations | The last of the three 2015 Annual Uehiro Lectures 'Why Worry About Future Generations'. Why should we care about what happens to human beings in the future, after we ourselves are long gone? | Samuel Scheffler | 06 Nov 2017 | |
476 | 2015 Uehiro Lectures: Temporal Parochialism and Its Discontents | The first of the three 2015 Annual Uehiro Lectures 'Why Worry About Future Generations'. Why should we care about what happens to human beings in the future, after we ourselves are long gone? | Samuel Scheffler | 06 Nov 2017 | |
475 | 2016 Annual Uehiro Lecture 1: Consequentialism for Cows | Professor Shelly Kagan delivers the first of three Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics, ‘How to Count Animals, More or Less’ | Shelly Kagan | 06 Nov 2017 | |
474 | 2016 Annual Uehiro Lecture 2: Deontology for Dogs | Professor Shelly Kagan delivers the second of three Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics, ‘How to Count Animals, More or Less’ | Shelly Kagan | 06 Nov 2017 | |
473 | 2016 Annual Uehiro Lecture 3: Foundation for Frogs | Professor Shelly Kagan delivers the final of three Annual Uehiro Lectures in Practical Ethics, ‘How to Count Animals, More or Less’ | Shelly Kagan | 06 Nov 2017 | |
472 | Creative Commons | 2014 Uehiro Lecture (3): The Question of Legal Rights for Animals | In these lectures I will raise some fundamental questions about the moral and legal standing of the other animals: the basis of our moral obligations to them, and whether it makes sense to think that animals might have legal rights. | Christine M. Korsgaard | 24 Aug 2017 |
471 | Creative Commons | 2014 Uehiro Lecture (2): The Moral Standing of Animals | In these lectures I will raise some fundamental questions about the moral and legal standing of the other animals: the basis of our moral obligations to them, and whether it makes sense to think that animals might have legal rights. | Christine M. Korsgaard | 24 Aug 2017 |
470 | Creative Commons | 2014 Uehiro Lecture (1): Animals, Human Beings, and Persons | In these lectures I will raise some fundamental questions about the moral and legal standing of the other animals: the basis of our moral obligations to them, and whether it makes sense to think that animals might have legal rights. | Christine M. Korsgaard | 24 Aug 2017 |
469 | Creative Commons | 2013 Annual Uehiro Lecture (3): Equal Opportunity | Third and final lecture from Professor Tim Scanlon in which he talks about the philosophical justifications for equalitiy of opportunity. Includes a roundtable discussion with Professors John Broome, Janet Radcliffe Richards and David Miller | Tim Scanlon, John Broome, Janet Radcliffe-Richards, David Miller | 24 Aug 2017 |
468 | Creative Commons | 2013 Annual Uehiro Lecture (2): Equal Status | In the second of three podcasts, Professor Tim Scanlon (Harvard University) delivers the second 2013 Annual Uehiro Lecture in the lecture series "When Does Equality Matter?" | Tim Scanlon | 24 Aug 2017 |
467 | 2013 Annual Uehiro Lecture (1): Equal Treatment | In the first of three podcasts, Professor Tim Scanlon (Harvard University) delivers the first 2013 Annual Uehiro Lecture in the lecture series "When Does Equality Matter?" | Tim Scanlon | 24 Aug 2017 | |
466 | Creative Commons | Sex in a Shifting Landscape Lecture Three: Oxford Uehiro Lectures 2012 | Third and final lecture from the 2012 Oxford Uehiro lectures in Practical Philosophy given be Professor Janet Radcliffe-Richards. | Janet Radcliffe-Richards | 24 Aug 2017 |
465 | Creative Commons | Sex in a Shifting Landscape Lecture Two:Oxford Uehiro Lectures 2012 | Second lecture in the 2012 Uehiro Lecture series 'Sex in A Shifting Landscape'. | Janet Radcliffe-Richards | 24 Aug 2017 |
464 | Creative Commons | Sex in a Shifting Landscape Lecture One: Oxford Uehiro Lectures 2012 | Professor Janet Radcliffe-Richards gives (OUC Distinguished Research Fellow) gives the first of three lectures on feminism for the Uehiro Practical Ethics lecture series. | Janet Radcliffe-Richards | 24 Aug 2017 |
463 | Making Good 3: Virtues, laws and consequentialism | Third of three lectures by in the 2011 Annual Uehiro Lecture Series "Making Good: The Challenge of Robustly Demanding Values". Delivered by Philip Pettit, Laurance S. Rockefeller University Professor of Politics and Human Values at Princeton University. | Philip Pettit | 24 Aug 2017 | |
462 | Making Good 2: Robust Demands and the Need for Law | Second of three lectures by in the 2011 Annual Uehiro Lecture Series "Making Good: The Challenge of Robustly Demanding Values". Delivered by Philip Pettit, Laurance S. Rockefeller University Professor of Politics and Human Values at Princeton University. | Philip Pettit | 24 Aug 2017 | |
461 | Making Good 1: Robust Demands and the Need for Virtue | First of three lectures in the 2011 Annual Uehiro Lecture Series "Making Good: The Challenge of Robustly Demanding Values". Delivered by Philip Pettit, Laurance S. Rockefeller University Professor of Politics and Human Values at Princeton University. | Philip Pettit | 24 Aug 2017 | |
460 | 2015 Welcome & Loebel Lecture in Neuroethics: Death and the self | This lecture investigates changing attitudes and beliefs about the persistence of the self. | Shaun Nichols | 23 Aug 2017 | |
459 | 2015 Loebel Lecture 1: Neurobiological materialism collides with the experience of being human | The first of three public lectures which took place in Oxford in November 2015. Series title: The theoretical challenge of modern psychiatry: no easy cure | Steven Hyman | 23 Aug 2017 | |
458 | 2015 Loebel Lecture 2: Science is quietly, inexorably eroding many core assumptions underlying psychiatry | The second of three public lectures which took place in Oxford in November 2015. Series title: The theoretical challenge of modern psychiatry: no easy cure | Steven Hyman | 23 Aug 2017 | |
457 | 2015 Loebel Lecture 3: What is the upshot? | The last of three public lectures which took place in Oxford in November 2015. Series title: The theoretical challenge of modern psychiatry: no easy cure | Steven Hyman | 23 Aug 2017 | |
456 | 2016 Loebel Lecture 1: Developmental risk and resilience: The challenge of translating multi-level data to concrete interventions | Professor Essi Viding delivers the first of two talks in the 2016 Loebel Lectures in Psychiatry and Philosophy series | Essi Viding | 23 Aug 2017 | |
455 | 2016 Loebel Lecture 2: Developmental risk and resilience: The challenge of translating multi-level data to concrete interventions | Professor Essi Viding delivers the second of two talks in the 2016 Loebel Lectures in Psychiatry and Philosophy series | Essi Viding | 23 Aug 2017 | |
454 | Creative Commons | 2016 Loebel Lectures one day Workshop: Eamon McCrory | To complement Essi Viding's lectures, Developmental risk and resilience: The challenge of translating multi-level data to concrete interventions | Eamon McCrory | 23 Aug 2017 |
453 | Creative Commons | 2016 Loebel Lectures one day Workshop: Charlotte Cecil | To complement Essi Viding's lectures, Developmental risk and resilience: The challenge of translating multi-level data to concrete interventions | Charlotte Cecil | 23 Aug 2017 |
452 | 2016 Loebel Lectures one day Workshop: Neil Levy | To complement Essi Viding's lectures, Developmental risk and resilience: The challenge of translating multi-level data to concrete interventions | Neil Levy | 23 Aug 2017 | |
451 | Creative Commons | 2016 Loebel Lectures one day Workshop: Richard Holton | To complement Essi Viding's lectures, Developmental risk and resilience: The challenge of translating multi-level data to concrete interventions | Richard Holton | 23 Aug 2017 |
450 | Creative Commons | 2016 Loebel Lectures one day Workshop: Matthew Parrott | To complement Essi Viding's lectures, Developmental risk and resilience: The challenge of translating multi-level data to concrete interventions | Matthew Parrott | 23 Aug 2017 |
449 | Creative Commons | 2016 Loebel Lectures one day Workshop: Nikolaus Steinbeis | To complement Essi Viding's lectures, Developmental risk and resilience: The challenge of translating multi-level data to concrete interventions | Nikolaus Steinbeis | 23 Aug 2017 |
448 | Creative Commons | 2016 Loebel Lectures one day Workshop: Peter Dayan | To complement Essi Viding's lectures, Developmental risk and resilience: The challenge of translating multi-level data to concrete interventions | Peter Dayan | 23 Aug 2017 |
447 | Double Seminar on Biomedical Technology and Moral Bioenhancement | In this double seminar, Erasmus visitors Laurentiu Staicu and Emanuel-Mihail Socaciua discuss the rise of biomedical technology and some of the legal issues of moral bioenhancement | Laurentiu Staicu, Emanuel-Mihail Socaciua | 05 Jul 2017 | |
446 | Aiming for Moral Mediocrity | In this talk, Eric Schwitzgebel considers whether it's acceptable to aim for peer-relative mediocrity. | Eric Schwitzgebel | 29 Jun 2017 | |
445 | Creative Commons | Solving the Replication Crisis in Psychology: Insights from History and Philosophy of Science | In this episode, Brian Earp discusses the 'Reproducibility Project' and questions whether psychology is in crisis or not. | Brian Earp | 27 Jun 2017 |
444 | Murder or a Legitimate Medical Procedure: the Withdrawal of Artificial Nutrition & Fluids from a Patient in a Persistent Vegetative Condition | In this talk, Professor John Paris asks "What is the historical meaning of "ordinary means" to sustain human life? And what has been the understanding for over 500 years of Catholic moral analysis of the obligation to sustain life?" | Fr. John Paris | 06 Jun 2017 | |
443 | Autism and Moral Responsibility: Executive Function and the Reactive Attitudes | Professor Richman's talk combines differing theories of models of autism and moral responsibility, and explores the practical implications arising from these ideas. | Kenneth Richman | 08 Mar 2017 | |
442 | The Neuroscience of Moral Agency (Or: How I Learned to Love Determinism and Still Respect Myself in the Morning) | In this public lecture, Dr William Casebeer discusses neuroscience, human agency and free will. | William Casebeer | 23 Feb 2017 | |
441 | Euthydemus English Text | The Euthydemus of Plato. To read this document, please see 'Download Media' section | Christopher Kirwan | 15 Feb 2017 | |
440 | Creative Commons | Humanity’s Collective Ownership of the Earth and Immigration | Mathias Risse discusses his recent JPE article 'Humanity’s Collective Ownership of the Earth and Immigration', with David Edmonds. | Mathias Risse, David Edmonds | 07 Feb 2017 |
439 | Implicit Bias and Racism | Paper presented by Neil Levy at the MT16 Oxford-Valencia Neuroethics Workshop. | Neil Levy | 23 Nov 2016 | |
438 | The Contribution of Neuroethics for Responsible Management Education | Paper presented by José Félix Lozano Aguilar at the MT16 Oxford-Valencia Neuroethics Workshop. | José Félix Lozano Aguilar | 23 Nov 2016 | |
437 | Neurointerventions to Prevent Crime and the Problem of Unjustified Incarceration | Paper presented by Katrien Devolder at the MT16 Oxford-Valencia Neuroethics Workshop. | Katrien Devolder | 23 Nov 2016 | |
436 | The New Problem of Personal Force in Morality | Paper presented by Emilian Mihailov at the MT16 Oxford-Valencia Neuroethics Workshop. | Emilian Mihailov | 23 Nov 2016 | |
435 | Can we Dissociate Reason from Feelings? Ten Critical Philosophical Questions to Greene's Dual Process Theory | Paper presented by Javier Gracia and Andrés Richard at the MT16 Oxford-Valencia Neuroethics Workshop. | Javier Gracia, Andrés Richard | 23 Nov 2016 | |
434 | Moral Reasoning is Not Like a Dog's Tail: A Critical Analysis of Social Intuitionism's Two Illusions of Moral Deliberation | Paper presented Pedro Jesús Pérez Zafrilla the MT16 Oxford-Valencia Neuroethics Workshop. | Pedro Jesús Pérez Zafrilla | 23 Nov 2016 |
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