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Online Symposium on Values in Medicine, Science, and Technology

In lieu of our annual conference, which we had to cancel due to the novel coronavirus pandemic, we are hosting an online symposium this Friday, June 26 at Noon to 2:00pm Central Time.

Join the Event via Microsoft Teams

We have four invited speakers:

Elyse Purcell (SUNY-Oneonta): “On Beneficence and Potential Harm: Disability and Genetic Enhancement.”

Elyse Purcell is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at SUNY-Oneonta and is the Secretary-Treasurer for the American Philosophical Association Central Division. She has published numerous articles in ethics, bioethics, and social and political philosophy. Always an interdisciplinary thinker, she aims to bring the insights from fields such as disability studies into contemporary philosophical discussions and debates.

Justin Biddle (Georgia Tech): “Predicting Recidivism: Value Judgments, Trade-offs, and Power Dynamics in Machine Learning”

Justin B. Biddle is an Associate Professor in the School of Public Policy at the Georgia Institute of Technology. He is the director of the Philosophy Program at Georgia Tech and a Faculty Affiliate in the Center for Machine Learning and the Center for Ethics and Technology. His research interests are interdisciplinary in nature, drawing on fields such as philosophy of science, technology, and medicine; ethics of emerging technologies, and science and technology policy. His current work focuses on the ethics of artificial intelligence and the role of value judgments in the design and development of computing technologies.

Dan Hicks (UC Merced): “When Virtues are Vices: ‘Anti-Science’ Epistemic Values in Environmental Politics.”

Dan Hicks (they/them) is a philosopher of science and Assistant Professor of Cognitive and Information Sciences at the University of California, Merced. Their primary academic research focuses on the role of ethical and political values in science and public scientific controversies, especially environmental controversies.

Mark Tschaepe (PVAMU): “Human/GAN Coupling: A Cyborg Perspective for Distributed Morality”

Mark Tschaepe is an Associate Professor of Philosophy and Program Coordinator of General Studies at Prairie View A&M University. He is also an Adjunct Assistant Professor at Baylor College of Medicine. His research includes issues concerning inquiry, pragmatism, and microaggressions, among other subjects. Currently, he is working on a project pertaining to problems of organizational paternalism in cybersecurity.

Center Director Matthew J. Brown will moderate the event and the discussion afterwards.


While not required, downloading Microsoft Teams to your desktop or laptop computer will provide the fastest access to the event. The Microsoft Teams app is necessary to participate via mobile devices.

All audience members will be muted when entering the meeting and will have the opportunity to pose questions in writing via the “Q&A” function on the right side of the screen. Live closed captioning is available to all attendees. Please look for the CC button when you join the meeting.

Should you have specific questions related to technical issues you are encountering during the event, please call the UT Dallas Help Desk at 972-883-2911.

For more information contact:
Magdalena Grohman
mggrohman@utdallas.edu