Walter Glannon
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Walter Glannon (May 2016)
Department of Philosophy University of Calgary 2500 University Dr. NW Calgary, AB, T2N 1N4, Canada Email: [email protected] Office: Social Sciences 1226 Phone: 403-220-3171
Professional Status Professor of Philosophy, University of Calgary (2014--)
Education PhD in Philosophy, Yale University, November 1995. Dissertation: Responsible Persons MA in Philosophy, Yale University, April 1993 PhD in Spanish Literature, The Johns Hopkins University, May 1982. Dissertation: The Development of Unamuno’s Ethics MA in Spanish Literature, The Johns Hopkins University, May 1979. BA (magna cum laude) in Philosophy and Spanish Literature, Duke University, May 1977
Areas of Specialization Bioethics, Neuroethics, Philosophy of Mind
Employment Experience Canada Research Chair in Medical Bioethics and Ethical Theory, University of Calgary, January 2006-December 2010 Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of Calgary, January 2006-December 2013 Associate Professor, Community Health Sciences, University of Calgary, January 2006- December 2010 Assistant Professor, W. Maurice Young Centre for Applied Ethics, University of British Columbia, September 2002-December 2005 Clinical Ethicist, Children’s and Women’s Health Centre of British Columbia, September 2002-Decembr 2005 Assistant Professor, Biomedical Ethics Unit, Faculty of Medicine, McGill University, January 2000-August 2001 Clinical Ethicist, Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, January 2000-May 2001 Senior Fellow, Institute for Ethics, American Medical Association, Chicago, IL, September 1998-June 1999 Lecturer in Philosophy, University of Calgary, September 1997-April 1998 Postdoctoral Fellow, Centre for Applied Ethics, University of British Columbia, July 1995-June 1997 Assistant and Associate Professor of Spanish Language and Literature, Smith College, 2
September 1983-June 1993 (tenured 1989) Other Professional Experience and Service Internal and External Examiner: Samantha Copeland, PhD Thesis, “The Case of the Triggered Memory: Serendipitous Discovery and the Ethics of Clinical Research,” Philosophy, Dalhousie University, September 4, 2015; Gordon Cooper, MA Thesis, ‘The Luck Objection to Libertarianism,” Philosophy, University of Calgary, May 22, 2015; Luca Casartelli, PhD Thesis, “Motor Cognition and Neuroepistemology,” University of Geneva, Philosophy/Bioethics, November 11, 2014; Tess Murphy, MA Thesis, Moral Obligation, Luck and Alternative Possibilities,” Philosophy, University of Calgary, December 6, 2012; Elske Straver, MA Thesis, ‘The Nature of Belief,” Philosophy, University of Calgary Undergraduate Studies Committee, Philosophy, University of Calgary, 2007-2008 Graduate Studies Committee, Philosophy, University of Calgary, 2008-2012 Graduate Preliminary Exam Committee (Ethics), Philosophy, University of Calgary 2015 Graduate University Scholarship Committee, University of Calgary, 2015 Advisory Committee, Montreal Neuroethics Network for Young Researchers, Institute de recherches cliniques de Montreal, April 2015 Workshop Participant, “Vulnerability in Deep-Brain Stimulation for Treatment- Refractory Depression,” Institut de recherches cliniques de Montreal, September 27, 2012 Seminar Leader, “Consciousness and Neuroethics: Brain, Body, Mind and Environment Interactions” Regina Apostolorum Pontifical University, Rome, Italy, May 2-4, 2012. Co-Investigator, New Emerging Team Research Group, “States of Mind: Emerging Issues in Neuroethics” funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), 2006-2011. Principal Investigator Francoise Baylis Collaborator, CIHR Project “Patient and Caregiver Perspectives of Ethical and Social Issues in Deep-Brain Stimulation for Neuropsychiatric Disorders,” 2012-2014. Principal Investigator Eric Racine. Abstract Review Committee for “Brain Matters I (Halifax, 2009) Abstract Review Committee for “Brain Matters II (Montreal, 2011) Abstract Review Committee for “Brain Matters III (Cleveland 2012) Workshop Participant, “Neuroscience and Responsibility,” Technical University of Delft, The Netherlands, February 10-12, 2010. Conference Planning Committee, “Brain Matters: New Directions in Neuroethics,” Halifax, September 2009. Organizer and moderator of a CIHR-funded workshop on free will and neuroscience, Banff, Alberta, May 9-10, 2008. Reviewer of applications for Tenure and Promotion to Associate Professor: Marilyn Rugg, Colgate University (Spanish) 1991; Christine Harrison, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto (Clinical Ethics) 2006; William Kasabenche, Washington State University (Philosophy) 2012. Reviewer of application for promotion to Personal Chair, Michael Hauskeller (Philosophy) 2015, University of Exeter, UK Editorial Boards: AJOB-Neuroscience, Neuroethics, Springer Book Series: Advances in Neuroethics 3
Scientific Review Committee, University of Toronto Joint Centre for Bioethics, 2007 Peer Reviewer for Canada Research Chairs, January 2006-December 2010 Acting Director of Undergraduate Medical Ethics Education, University of Calgary, Faculty of Medicine, August-December 2006 Member of Forum Recommendations Group, Canadian Council on Organ Donation and Transplantation, Forum on Donation after Cardiocirculatory Death, Vancouver, February 17-20, 2005. British Columbia Children’s Hospital Ethics Committee, September 2002-December 2005 (Chair, September 2003-December 2005) British Columbia Women’s Hospital Ethics Committee, September 2002-December 2005 Mortality Review Committee, British Columbia Children’s and Women’s Hospital, January 2003-December 2005 Research Ethics Committee, Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, January 2000-May 2001 Clinical Ethics Committee, Jewish General Hospital, January 2000-May 2001 (Chair September 2000-May 2001) Director, Masters Specialization in Bioethics, Biomedical Ethics Unit, McGill University, September 2000-August 2001 Clinical Ethics Fellow, MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics, University of Chicago School of Medicine, September 1998-April 1999 Chair, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, Smith College, April 1991-March 1993 Guest Editor for Journal of Ethics in Mental Health, Volume 2 (December 2007), Thematic issue on “Neurodiversity” Reviewer for: American Journal of Bioethics—Neuroscience; American Journal of Bioethics—Primary Research; American Journal of Pharmacogenomics; American Journal of Transplantation; American Philosophical Quarterly; Archives of Internal Medicine; Brain Topography; Bioethica Forum; Bioethics; BMC Medical Ethics; British Medical Bulletin; Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics; Cambridge University Press; Canadian Journal of Philosophy; Canadian Philosophical Association Annual Conference; Criminal Law and Philosophy; Critical Care Medicine; Developing World Bioethics; European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience; Frontiers in Neuroscience; Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience; Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience; Foundation for Polish Science; Guggenheim Foundation; Journal of Applied Philosophy; Journal of Medical Ethics; Law and Philosophy; Leverhulme Trust; McGraw-Hill Publishers; Medicine, Health Care & Philosophy; Mind; MIT Press; The Lancet; The Lancet Neurology; Milbank Quarterly; The Monist; Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research; Neuroethics; Journal of Neurosurgery; Oxford University Press; Pediatrics & Child Health; Philosophical Psychology; Philosophy, Ethics and Humanities in Medicine; Philosophy, Psychiatry & Psychology; Progress in Neurobiology; Public Affairs Quarterly; Routledge Publishers; Springer Publishers; Swiss National Science Foundation; Synthese; Templeton Foundation; Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics; Wellcome Trust; Western Canadian Philosophical Association Conference; Westview Press, World Neurosurgery
Teaching Experience Philosophy and Neuroscience,” winter 2016, University of Calgary, Department of Philosophy 4
“Ancient Philosophy,” fall 2015, fall 2016, University of Calgary, Department of Philosophy “Wittgenstein,” fall 2014, University of Calgary, Department of Philosophy “Neuroscience: History, Philosophy, Society and Ethics,” University of Calgary, BSc Program in Neuroscience, fall 2010--2013 (team taught with Keith Sharkey, Andrew Bullock, Frank Stahnisch and Manuel Bulliger) “Advanced Topics in Philosophy of Law: Neuroscience and Law,” fall 2013, University of Calgary, Department of Philosophy “Advanced Topics in Philosophy of Mind: Consciousness,” fall 2012, University of Calgary, Department of Philosophy “Death: Metaphysical and Ethical Issues,” University of Calgary, Department of Philosophy, fall 2011, 2012, 2016 “Morality, Virtue, and Society,” University of Calgary, Department of Philosophy, winter 2011 “Bioethics,” University of Calgary, Department of Philosophy, winter and fall 2007, fall 2008, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2014 and 2015 and winter 2015 and 2016 “Directed Reading in Bioethics,” winter 2015. “Neuroethics,” Graduate/Undergraduate Seminar, University of Calgary, Department of Philosophy, winter 2006 and 2011 terms Medical Student Teaching (lectures and small-group case-based discussions), University of Calgary, Faculty of Medicine, January 2006-January 2010 Clinical Ethics Rounds for Neurology Residents, University of Calgary, Faculty of Medicine, Fall 2007-Winter 2010 (bi-monthly) Clinical Ethics Rounds for Maternal-Fetal Medicine, Medical Genetics, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Pediatric Residents, Pediatric Nephrology, Neurology, Oncology/Hematology, Psychiatry, Psychology, and Perinatology at British Columbia Children’s and Women’s Health Centre and Sunny Hill Health Centre, 2002-2005 Ethical Issues in Palliative Care and HIV-AIDS, St. Paul’s Hospital, Vancouver, BC, June 2-9, 2003 University of British Columbia Mini-Med School, Research Ethics, April 2003 Lectures on Research Ethics for Medical Students, University of British Columbia Faculty of Medicine, fall 2002-spring 2003 Seminar on Bioethical Theory, Biomedical Ethics Unit, McGill University, Fall 2000 Seminar on Genetics and Ethics, Biomedical Ethics Unit, McGill University, winter 2000. Internal Medicine Resident Ethics Rounds, Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, February 2000-February 2001 (monthly) Ethics Section Leader, Institute for Ethics, American Medical Association, September- December 1998 Bioethics, University of Calgary, Department of Philosophy, Fall 1997 and Winter 1998 Contemporary Moral Problems, University of Calgary, Department of Philosophy, Winter 1998 Ancient Philosophy and Ethics, Yale University, Department of Philosophy (Teaching Assistant), fall 1993 and spring 1994 Spanish Language and Literature, Smith College, September 1983-May 1993 5
Graduate Supervision Maya Goldenberg (BA), Master’s Bioethics Program, Philosophy, McGill University MA Thesis: “The Discourse of Bioethics,” completed October 2001. Dominique Robert (RN) Master’s Bioethics Program, Experimental Medicine, McGill University. MSc Thesis “Healing in Medicine,” completed October 2001) Fabian Ballesteros (MD), Master’s Bioethics Program, Experimental Medicine, McGill University. MSc Thesis: “Sanctity of Life,” completed November 2001. Natalie Bandrauk (MD), Master’s Bioethics Program, Experimental Medicine, McGill University. MSc Thesis: “Medical Futility,” completed August 2002. J. David Guerrero (MA), Philosophy, University of Calgary (co- supervisor with Dr. John Baker), PhD Thesis: “Valuing Concepts of Health and Disease,” completed August 2011. Kiran Pohar Manhas (MSc), Medical Science, University of Calgary (co- supervisor with Dr. Ian Mitchell). PhD Thesis: “The Ethics of Home Care for Ventilator-Dependent Children,” completed June 2011. Raymond Aldred, Philosophy (BA), University of Calgary, MA Thesis: “Broadening the Boundaries of Agency: Cognitive Disability, Agency, and Autonomy,” completed July 2013 Ying-Tung Lin (MA), Philosophisches Seminar, Johannes Gutenberg-Universitat, Mainz, Germany, PhD Thesis: “Conceptual and Normative Issues of Memory Enhancement,” (co-supervisor with Dr. Thomas Metzinger), completed July 2014 Jared Craig, Philosophy (BA, LLB), University of Calgary, PhD Thesis: “Direct Brain Interventions and the Law,” 2016- Justin Caouette, (BA, MA), University of Calgary, PhD Thesis: “The Ethics of Enhancement,” 2016- Monte Forster (BA, LLB), Philosophy, University of Calgary, MA Thesis: “Abortion and the Non-Identity Problem,” 2016- Pierson Tse (BSc), University of Calgary, MA course-based: “Death: Metaphysical and Ethical Aspects,” 2016- Brayden Mills-Smith, University of Calgary, MA Thesis: “Addiction,” 2016-
Grants, Fellowships, and Scholarships Fellow, The Hastings Center (2016- ) Visiting Researcher, Brocher Foundation, Geneva, Switzerland, May 1-31, 2011; April 1- 30, 2013 John Templeton Foundation Grant, “Diminishing and Enhancing Free Will,” 2011-2014. Visiting Scholar, Institute for the Medical Humanities, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX, February 2012. Canada Research Chair in Medical Bioethics and Ethical Theory, Tier 2, University of Calgary, January 2006-December 2010 ($500,000 from CIHR) Senior Fellow, Institute for Ethics, American Medical Association, Chicago, IL, September 1998-June 1999 Clinical Ethics Fellow, MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics, University of Chicago School of Medicine, September 1998-1999 Killam Post-Doctoral Fellow, Centre for Applied Ethics, University of British 6
Columbia, July 1995-June 1997 Publications: Books Psychiatric Neuroethics: Philosophical Issues in Research and Practice (under contract with Oxford University Press, UK, International Perspectives in Philosophy & Psychiatry series) Neuroethics of Memory: From Total Recall to Oblivion (under contract with Cambridge University Press, UK) Free Will and the Brain: Neuroscientific. Philosophical and Legal Perspectives (ed.). Cambridge University Press, UK, 2015 Brain, Body, and Mind: Neuroethics with a Human Face, Oxford University Press, 2011. Bioethics and the Brain, Oxford University Press, 2007 (Winner, CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title for 2007) Defining Right and Wrong in Brain Science: Essential Readings in Neuroethics (ed.), Dana Press, 2007. Biomedical Ethics, Oxford University Press, 2005 (Fundamentals of Philosophy Series) The Mental Basis of Responsibility, Ashgate, 2002 Contemporary Readings in Biomedical Ethics (ed.), Wadsworth, 2002 Genes and Future People: Philosophical Issues in Human Genetics, Westview Press, 2001
Publications: Articles and Chapters 2017. W. Glannon, “Behavior Control, Meaning and Neuroscience,” in G. Caruso and O. Flanagan, eds., Neuroexistentialism: Meaning, Morals and Purpose in the Age of Neuroscience. New York: Oxford University Press (forthcoming) 2017. W. Glannon, “Neural Prosthetics, Behavior Control and Criminal Responsibility,” in N. Vincent, ed., Neuroenhancement and the Law. New York: Oxford University Press (forthcoming) 2017. W. Glannon, “Brain Implants: Implications for Free Will,” in K. Rommelfanger and S. Johnson, eds., Routledge Handbook of Neuroethics. New York: Routledge/Taylor and Francis (forthcoming) 2017. W. Glannon, “Are We Underestimating the Risk in Living Kidney Donation?”, Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 26 (forthcoming) 2016. W. Glannon, “The Value and Disvalue of Consciousness,” Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 25 (forthcoming) 2016. W. Glannon, “Brain-Computer Interfaces in End-of-Life Decision-Making,” Brain-Computer Interfaces 3 (forthcoming) 2016. W. Glannon, “Psychopathy and Responsibility: Empirical Data and Normative Judgments,” Philosophy, Psychiatry & Psychology 23 (forthcoming) 2016. W. Glannon, “Ethical Issues in Neuroprosthetics,” Journal of Neural Engineering 13, February 9, e021002, 1-22 2016. W. Glannon and C. Ineichen, “Philosophical Aspects of Closed-Loop Neuroscience, in A. El Hady, ed., Closed-Loop Neuroscience. San Diego: Elsevier/Academic Press. 2015. W. Glannon, “Research Domain Criteria: A Final Paradigm for Psychiatry?” Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2015.00488, September 8, 1-4. 7
2015. W. Glannon, “Neuromodulation and the Mind-Brain Relation,” Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience, doi: 10.3389/fnint.2015.00022, March 14, 1-3 2015. W. Glannon, “Psychiatric Neuroethics II: Less Invasive and Non-Invasive Interventions,” in Oxford Handbook of Psychiatric Ethics, Volume 2, J. Sadler, K.W.M. Fulford and CW van Staden, eds., doi: 10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198732372.013.31, January 15, 1-18 2015. W. Glannon, Psychiatric Neuroethics I: Deep Brain Stimulation and Lesioning,” in Oxford Handbook of Psychiatric Ethics, Volume 2, Sadler, Fulford and Van Staden, eds. doi: 1093/oxfordhb/9780198732372.013.30, January 15, 1-13. 2015. W. Glannon, “Neuroethics: Cognitive Enhancement,” in S. Goldberg, ed., Oxford Philosophy Handbooks Online, doi: 10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199935314.013.43, January 10, 1-13. 2015. W. Glannon, “Free Will in Light of Neuroscience,” in Glannon, ed., Free Will and the Brain: Neuroscientific, Philosophical and Legal Perspectives, 3-24. 2015. W. Glannon, “Neuroethics.” In Encyclopedia of Global Bioethics, H. Ten Have, ed. Dordrecht: Springer, doi: 10.1007/978-3-319-05544-2_307-1, June 30, 1-12. 2014. W. Glannon. “Reflections on Neuroenhancement,” in N. Levy and J. Clausen, eds., Springer Handbook of Neuroethics, 1251-1265. 2014. W. Glannon, “Anesthesia, Amnesia, and Harm,” Journal of Medical Ethics 40: 651-657 2014. W. Glannon, “Intraoperative Awareness: Consciousness, Memory and Law.” Journal of Medical Ethics 40: 663-664 2014. C. Ineichen, W. Glannon, Y. Temel, C. Baumann and O. Surucu. “A Critical Reflection on the Technological Development of deep brain stimulation (DBS).” Frontiers in Human Neuroscience doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2014.00730. September 17, 1-7 2014. W. Glannon, “The Limitations and Potential of Neuroimaging in the Criminal Law,” Journal of Ethics 18: 153-170 2014. W. Glannon, “Taylor on Postmortem Organ Procurement,” Journal of Medical Ethics 40: 637-638 2014. E. Bell, E. Racine, W. Glannon, et al. “Beyond Consent in Research: Revisiting Vulnerability in Deep-Brain Stimulation for Psychiatric Disorders,” Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 23: 361-368 2014. W.Glannon, “Ethical Issues with Brain-Computer Interfaces,” Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience, doi: 10.3389/fnsys.2014.00136, July 25, 1-3. 2014. W.Glannon, “Philosophical Reflections on Therapeutic Brain Stimulation,” Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience, doi: 10.3389.frcom.2014.00054, May 15, 1-3. 2014. W.Glannon, “Prostheses for the Will,” Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience, doi: 10.3389/fnsys.2014.00079, May 5, 1-3. 2014. W. Glannon, “Intervening in the Psychopath’s Brain,” Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 35: 43-57 2014. W. Glannon, “Neuromodulation, Agency, and Autonomy,” Brain Topography 27: 46-54 2013. N. Lipsman and W. Glannon. “Brain, Mind, and Machine: What Are the 8
Implications of Deep Brain Stimulation for Perceptions of Personal Identity, Agency and Free Will? Bioethics 27: 465-470 2013. W. Glannon. “Prognosis Matters, not Diagnosis.” American Journal of Bioethics—Neuroscience 4 (4): 31-32 2013. W. Glannon. “The Moral Insignificance of Death in Organ Donation,” Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 22: 192-202 2013. W. Glannon, “Burdens of ANH Outweigh Benefits in the Minimally Conscious State,” Journal of Medical Ethics 39: 551-552 2013. W. Glannon, “Brain Injury and Survival,’ in J, Taylor, ed. The Metaphysics and Ethics of Death (New York: Oxford University Press), 245-266 2013. W. Glannon, “Psychopharmacology and Functional Neurosurgery: Manipulating Memory, Thought, and Mood,” in R. Sandler, ed., Ethics and Emerging Technologies New York: Palgrave-Macmillan, 164-176 2012. W. Glannon, “Obsessions, Compulsions, and Free Will,” Philosophy, Psychiatry & Psychology 19: 333-337 2012. W. Glannon. “Neuropsychological Aspects of Enhancing the Will,” The Monist 95: 378-398. 2012. L. Ross, W. Glannon, L. Gottlieb, and R. Thistlethwaite, “Different Standards Are Not Double Standards: All Elective Surgical Patients Are Not Alike,” Journal of Clinical Ethics 23 (2): 119-129. 2012. W. Glannon, “Neuroethics/Brain Imaging” Encyclopedia of Applied Ethics, 2nd edition, volume 3, R. Chadwick, ed. (San Diego: Academic Press), 216-224. 2011. W. Glannon. “Diminishing and Enhancing Free Will,” American Journal of Bioethics—Neuroscience 2 (3): 15-26. 2011. W. Glannon, “Donation, Death, and Harm,” American Journal of Bioethics 11 (8): 48-49. 2011. W. Glannon, “Is it Unethical for Doctors to Encourage Healthy Adults to Donate a Kidney to a Stranger? Yes.” British Medical Journal 343: 1040-1041. 2011. W. Glannon, “Neuroscience’s Threat to Free Will,” in H. Samuelson and K. Mossman, eds., Building Better Humans? Refocusing the Debate on Transhumanism. Frankfurt, Germany: Peter Lang, 335-353. 2011. W. Glannon, “Brain, Behavior, and Knowledge,” Neuroethics 4(3): 191-194. 2010. W. Glannon, “Neuroscience and Norms,” AJOB Neuroscience 1 (4): 31-32. 2010. W. Glannon, “The Neuroethics of Memory,” in S. Nalbantian, P. Matthews, and J. L. McClelland, eds., The Memory Process: Neuroscientific and Humanistic Perspectives (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press), 233-251. 2010. W. Glannon, “Consent to Deep-Brain Stimulation for Neuropsychiatric Disorders,” Journal of Clinical Ethics 21: 105-112. 2010. W. Glannon, “Afterword” to J. Giordano and B. Gordijn, eds., Scientific, and Philosophical Perspectives in Neuroethics, Cambridge University Press, 370-374. 2010. W. Glannon, ”What Neuroscience Can (and Cannot) Tell Us about Criminal Responsibility,” in M. Freeman, ed., Current Legal Issues, volume 13, “Law and Neuroscience” (Oxford: Oxford University Press), 13-28. 2009. W. Glannon, “Neuroscience, Free Will, and Responsibility,” Journal of Ethics in Mental Health 4 (2) (2009): e1-6. 9
2009. P. Couillard, K. Brownell, and W. Glannon, “Educating Future Neuroscience Clinicians in Neuroethics: A Report of One Program’s Work-in-Progress,” Journal of Ethics in Mental Health 4 (2): e1-4. 2009. W. Glannon, ”Free Riding and Organ Donation,” Journal of Medical Ethics 35: 590-591 2009. W. Glannon, “Our Brains are not Us,” Bioethics 23 (6): 321-329 2009. W. Glannon, ”Stimulating Brains, Altering Minds,” Journal of Medical Ethics 35: 289-29 2009. W. Glannon, “Responsibility and Priority in Liver Transplantation,” Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 18: 23-35. Reprinted in J. Pierce and G. Randels, eds., Contemporary Bioethics: a Reader with Cases (New York: Oxford University Press, 2010) and in F. Baylis et al., eds., Health Care Ethics in Canada, Third Edition (Toronto: Nelson, 2012), 122-129. 2008. W. Glannon, ”The Blessing and Burden of Biological Psychiatry,” Journal of Ethics in Mental Health 3 (2): e5-7 2008. W. Glannon, ”Neurostimulation and the Minimally Conscious State,” Bioethics 22: 337-345 2008. W. Glannon, ”Moral Responsibility and the Psychopath,” Neuroethics 1, 3: 158- 166. 2008. W. Glannon, “Psychopharmacological Enhancement,” Neuroethics 1,1: 45-54. Reprinted in S. Hong and D. Jang, eds., Man in the Brain and Brain in Society: Introduction to Neuroethics. Seoul, South Korea: Bada Publishing, forthcoming. 2008. W. Glannon, “Underestimating the Risk in Living Kidney Donation,” Journal of Medical Ethics 34: 127-128. 2008. W Glannon, “The Case against Conscription of Cadaveric Organs for Transplantation,” Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 17: 330-336. 2008. W. Glannon, “Decelerating and Arresting Human Aging,” in B. Gordijn and Ruth Chadwick, eds., Medical Enhancement and Posthumanity (Berlin & London: Springer, 188-203 2008. W. Glannon, “Deep-Brain Stimulation for Depression,” HEC Forum 20 (4): 325-335 2008. W. Glannon, ”Organ Donation,” Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada Bioethics Education Project http://rcpsc.medical.org/bioethics/cases/index.php 2007. W. Glannon, General and Section Introductions to Defining Right and Wrong in Brain Science, Glannon, ed., xiii-xviii, 3-5, 63-65, 95-98, 171-174, 233-236, 315- 318 2007. W. Glannon, ”Neurodiversity,” Journal of Ethics in Mental Health 2 (3): e6-11 2007. W. Glannon, Editorial Essay for Thematic Issue on “Neurodiversity,” Journal of Ethics in Mental Health 2 (2): e5. 2007. W. Glannon, “Just Deserts?” Hastings Center Report 32 (3): 5. 2007. W. Glannon, “Persons, Metaphysics, and Ethics, American Journal of Bioethics: Neuroscience 7 (1): 68-69 2007. W. Glannon.“Constructive Memory and Memory Enhancement,” Bioethics Forum, May 19, e1-3 10
2006. L. F. Ross and W. Glannon, “A Compounding of Errors: The Case of Bone Marrow Donation between Non-Intimate Siblings,” Journal of Clinical Ethics 17: 220-226 2006. S. Shemie, W. Glannon, et al. “Donation after Cardiocirculatory Death in Canada,” Canadian Medical Association Journal 175 (10): S1-S24 2006. W. Glannon, “Phase I Oncology Trials: Why the Therapeutic Misconception Will not Go Away,” Journal of Medical Ethics 32: 252-255. 2006. W. Glannon, “Free Will and Moral Responsibility in the Age of Neuroscience,” Lahey Clinic Medical Ethics 13 (2): 1-2. 2006. W. Glannon, “Neuroethics,” Bioethics 20: 37-52. Reprinted in B. Steinbock, J. Arras, and A. J. London, eds. Ethical Issues in Modern Medicine, seventh edition (New York: McGraw-Hill, 2009), 856-869. 2006. W. Glannon, “Genetic Enhancement,” in D. DeGrazia and T. Mappes, eds., Biomedical Ethics, Sixth Edition (New York: McGraw-Hill): 601-606. 2006. W. Glannon, “Psychopharmacology and Memory,” Journal of Medical Ethics 32: 164-168. Reprinted in Glannon ed., Defining Right and Wrong in Brain Science: Essential Readings in Neuroethics, 258-270 2006. W. Glannon, “Commentary on the Case of a Patient with Psychosis and Cirrhosis,” Journal of Ethics in Mental Health 1(1): e8. 2005. W. Glannon, “Neurobiology, Neuroimaging, and Free Will,” Midwest Studies in Philosophy 29: 68-82. Reprinted in Steinbock et al., Ethical Issues in Modern Medicine, 2009, 903-913. 2005. W. Glannon, “Medicine through the Novel: Lying Awake, Journal of Medical Ethics: Medical Humanities 31: 31-34 2005. W. Glannon and L. F. Ross, “Obligation and Risk-Benefit Assessment in Living Organ Donation: A Reply to Aaron Spital,” Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 14: 191-198. 2005. W. Glannon, “Ethical Issues Surrounding Organ Donation after Cardiocirculatory Death,” Canadian Council on Donation and Transplantation, Edmonton, AB, Canada: 18 pp. http://www.ccdt.ca. 2004. W. Glannon, “Transcendence and Healing,” Journal of Medical Ethics: Medical Humanities 30: 70-73. 2003. W. Glannon, “Endophenotypes,” Philosophy, Psychiatry & Psychology 10: 277- 284 2003. W. Glannon, “Genetic Intervention and Personal Identity,” in B. Almond and M. Parker, eds., Ethical Issues in the New Genetics: Are Genes Us? (Aldershot: Ashgate): 75-88. 2003. W. Glannon, “Do the Sick Have a Right to Cadaveric Organs?” Journal of Medical Ethics 29: 153-156 2003. L. F. Ross, W. Glannon, M. Josephson, and R. Thistlethwaite, ”All Living Donors should not be Treated Equally,” Transplantation 74: 1762-1763 2002. W. Glannon, “The Psychology and Physiology of Depression,” Philosophy, Psychiatry & Psychology 9: 265-269. 2002. W. Glannon, “Depression as a Mind-Body Problem,” Philosophy, Psychiatry & Psychology 9: 243-254 11
2002. L. F. Ross, W. Glannon, M. Josephson, R. Thistlethwaite, “Should All Living Donors Be Treated Equally?” Transplantation 74: 418-421. 2002. W. Glannon and L. F. Ross, “Do Genetic Relationships Create Moral Obligations in Organ Transplantation?” Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 11 (April): 153-159 2002. W. Glannon and L. F. Ross, “Are Doctors Altruistic?” Journal of Medical Ethics 28 (4): 68-69. 2002. W. Glannon, “Extending the Human Life Span,” Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 27: 339-354 2002. W. Glannon, “Identity, Prudential Concern, and Extended Lives,” Bioethics 16: 266-281 2002. W. Glannon, “Reply to Harris,” Bioethics 16: 292-297. 2002. W. Glannon, “Neuroimaging and Determining Responsibility,” Cerebrum 4 (December): 5-6. 2002. W. Glannon, “Comments on Free Will,” in S. Marcus, ed. Neuroethics: Mapping the Field. Washington, DC: Dana Press, 26-27. 2002. W. Glannon, Section Introductions to Contemporary Readings in Biomedical Ethics, Glannon, ed., 34-36, 98-101, 165-167, 248-250, 324-326, 401-404. 2002. W. Glannon, “Introduction” to Contemporary Readings in Biomedical Ethics, Glannon, ed., 1-33. 2001. W. Glannon, “Rationing Health Care in the United States and Canada, in E.H. Loewy and R.S. Loewy, eds., Changing Health Care Systems From Ethical, Economic, and Cross-Cultural Perspectives (New York: Kluwer/Plenum Publishers): 143-150 2001. W. Glannon, “Persons, Lives, and Posthumous Harms,” Journal of Social Philosophy 32: 127-142 2000. W. Glannon, “Tracing the Soul: Medical Decisions at the Margins of Life,” Christian Bioethics 6: 48-68 1999. W. Glannon, “Responsibility and Control: Fischer and Ravizza’s Theory of Moral Responsibility,” Law and Philosophy 18: 187-213 1999. W. Glannon, “The Case for Libertarian Free Will,” Inquiry 42: 285-303. 1999. W. Glannon, “Diamond and Daniels on Medical Rationing,” Economics and Philosophy 15: 119-125 1998. W. Glannon, “Moral Responsibility and Personal Identity,” American Philosophical Quarterly 35: 231-249. 1998. W. Glannon, “The Ethics of Human Cloning,” Public Affairs Quarterly 12: 287- 305. Reprinted in M.R. Ruse and A. Sheppard, eds., Cloning: Responsible Science or Technomadness? (Amherst, NY: Prometheus Press, 2001). 1998. W. Glannon, “Genes, Embryos, and Future People,” Bioethics 12: 187-211 Reprinted in The Bioethics Reader, R. Chadwick et al., eds. (Oxford: Blackwell, 2007), 408-433. 1998. W. Glannon, “Responsibility, Alcoholism, and Liver Transplantation,” Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 23: 31-49. Reprinted in J. Pierce and G. Randels, Contemporary Bioethics: A Reader with Cases (New York: Oxford University Press, 2009), 12
1997. W. Glannon, “Sensitivity and Responsibility for Consequences,” Philosophical Studies 87: 223-233 1997. W. Glannon, “Critical Notice of F.M. Kamm, Morality, Mortality, Volume I: Death and Whom to Save from It, Canadian Journal of Philosophy 27: 407-421. 1997. W. Glannon, “Psychopathy and Responsibility,” Journal of Applied Philosophy 14: 263-275. 1997. W. Glannon, “Semicompatibilism and Anomalous Monism,” Philosophical Papers 26: 211-231 1996. W. Glannon, “The Morality of Selective Termination,” Biomedical Ethics Reviews, Volume 13: Reproduction, Technology, and Rights, J.M. Humber and R.F. Almeder, eds. (Totowa, NJ: Humana Press): 93-109. 1995. W. Glannon, “Equality, Priority, and Numbers,” Social Theory and Practice 21: 427-455 1995. W. Glannon, “Responsibility and the Principle of Possible Action,” Journal of Philosophy 92: 261-274 1994. W. Glannon, “Omnipotence and the Transfer of Power,” International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 36: 81-103. 1994. W. Glannon, “Temporal Asymmetry, Life, and Death,” American Philosophical Quarterly 31: 235-244 1994. W. Glannon, “On the Revised Principle of Alternate Possibilities,” Southern Journal of Philosophy 32: 49-60. 1993. W. Glannon, “Epicureanism and Death,” The Monist 76: 222-234 1988. W. Glannon, “Virtue and Luck in Aristotle’s Ethics,” Proceedings of the Sixteenth Philosophy Colloquium, University of Dayton, University of Dayton Review 19: 23-33. Reprinted as “Accion y fortuna en la etica de Aristoteles,” Universidad Nacional de Cordoba (Argentina), CIEF, Volume 3 (1989): 1293-1317. 1988. W. Glannon, “The Author’s Paradox,” British Journal of Aesthetics 28: 239-247. 1988. W. Glannon, “Unamuno y la metafisica de la ficcion, “ in A. Loureiro, ed., Estelas, laberintos, nuevas sendas (Barcelona: Anthropos), 95-108. 1987. W. Glannon, “Unamuno’s San Manuel Bueno, martir: Ethics through Fiction,” Modern Language Notes 102: 316-333. Reprinted in Short Story Criticism, Volume 69 (New York: Gale/Thomson Publishing, 2003), and Twentieth Century Literary Criticism, Volume 148 (New York: Thomson/Gale Publishing, 2004) 1987. W. Glannon, “Wittgenstein’s Epistemological Naturalism,” in G. Schurz and P. Weingartner, eds., Proceedings of the 11th International Wittgenstein Symposium, (Vienna: Holder-Pichler-Tempsky), 140-143 1987. W. Glannon, “Why There is no Fact of the Matter about Meaning in Fiction,” in D. Marshall, ed., Literature as Philosophy/Philosophy as Literature (Iowa City: University of Iowa Press), 94-105. 1986. W. Glannon, “Wittgenstein’s Place in the Skeptical Tradition,” in W. Leinfellner and P. Weingartner, eds., Proceedings of the 10th International Wittgenstein Symposium (Vienna: Holder-Pichler-Tempsky), 550-553. 1986. W. Glannon, “What Literary Theory Misses in Wittgenstein,” Philosophy and Literature 10: 263-272 1985. W. Glannon, “Charity and Distributive Justice: Misericordia Reexamined,” Modern Language Notes 100: 247-264. 13
1985. W. Glannon, “The Psychology of Knowledge in El licenciado vidriera,” Revista hispanica moderna 20 (1): 86-96.
Publications: Reviews 2016. Joseph Fins, Rights Come to Mind: Brain Injury, Ethics, and the Struggle for Consciousness, American Journal of Bioethics 16 (6) 1-2. 2014. James Stacey Taylor, Death, Posthumous Harm, and Bioethics, Bioethics 28: 155-156. 2012. T.M Wilkinson, Ethics and the Acquisition of Organs, Journal of Value Inquiry 46: 379-382. 2012. Sean Spence, The Actor’s Brain: Exploring the Cognitive Neuroscience of Free Will, AJOB-Neuroscience 3 (4): 93-95. 2011. Martha Farah (ed.), Neuroethics: An Introduction with Readings, Neuroethics 4 (3): 263-265. 2011. Steven Luper, The Philosophy of Death, Analysis 71 (3): 601-603. 2010. Ben Bradley, Well-Being and Death, Journal of Value Inquiry 44: 107- 111. 2008. R. Merkel et al., Intervening in the Brain: Changing Psyche and Society Hastings Center Report 38 (4): 46-47. 2008. John Harris, Enhancing Evolution: The Case for Making Better People, Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 17: 347-349 2007. Keith Wailoo et al., A Death Retold: Jesica Santillan, the Bungled Transplant, and the Paradoxes of Medical Citizenship, Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 50: 637-639 2003. Jack Li, Can Death Be a Harm to the Person Who Dies?, Journal of Medical Ethics 29: e3. 1999. Lawrie Reznek, Evil or Ill? Justifying the Insanity Defense, Ethics 105: 704. 1997. Stephen Post, The Moral Challenge of Alzheimer Disease, Ethics 103: 547. 1983. John Butt, San Manuel Bueno, martir, Modern Language Notes 98: 317- 320. 1979. Victoria Camps, Pragmatica del lenguaje y filosofia analitica, Modern Language Notes 94: 409-412.
Publications: Magazine Articles and Newsletters 2016. “Communication in Severe Brain Injury,” Brainstorm International Neuroethics Forum, February 1. 2015. “Dead Enough,” Aeon Magazine, October 1, 2,200 words. http://aeon.co/magazone.philosophy/we-should-harvest-organs-from-patients- before-death/ 2014. “The Free Will Fix,” Aeon Magazine, July 27, 2,000 words. http://www.aeon.co/magazine.philosophy/how-new-implants-can-restore-free- will 14
Presentations (last 11 years) “Are We Underestimating the Risk in Living Kidney Donation,” MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics Alumni Conference, University of Chicago, November 11, 2016 “Moral Enhancement: Pharmacological, Psychological and Social Aspects of a Collective Action Problem,” University of Exeter, UK, July 6, 2016 “Ethical Issues in Neuroenhancement,” Seminar Series on Neuroethics, MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics, University of Chicago, November 4, 2015 “Manipulating Memory: Philosophical and Legal Issues,” Department of Philosophy, Dalhousie University, September 4, 2015. “Moral Enhancement,” Annual Conference of the Italian Neuroethics Society, Padua, Italy, May 16, 2015. “Cognitive Enhancement,” Montreal Neuroethics Conference for Young Researchers, Institut de recherches cliniques de Montreal, April 17, 2015 “Ethical Issues in Neural Transplantation,” Transplant Ethics Forum, Vancouver General Hospital, November 21, 2014. “Probing and Modulating the Brain: Philosophical Reflections on Functional Neurosurgery,” University of Zurich Hospital, November 12, 2014 “The Legal Implications of Neural Prosthetics,” Atlanta Neurolaw Conference, September 13, 2014. “Implications of Neuroscience for Moral and Legal Responsibility,” Neuroethics Network Meeting, Paris, June 19, 2014. “Neuroskepticism,” 69th Annual Meeting of the Ogden Surgical-Medical Society, Ogden, Utah, May 16, 2014. “The Moral Insignificance of Death in Organ Donation,” University of Illinois, Chicago, College of Medicine Medical Ethics Lecture Series, March 5, 2014 “What Strokes Can Tell Us about Consciousness” Poster Presentation, second author with Michel Shamy, Canadian Stroke Conference, Montreal, October 17, 2013 “Neuromodulation for Disorders of the Will,” Department of Philosophy, University of Turku, Finland, April 29, 2013. “Manipulating Memory,” Workshop on the Future of Neuroenhancement: Morality, Memory & Love, Institut fur Ethik, Geschichte und Theorie der Medizin, Muenster, Germany, April 21, 2013. “Enhancing the Will,” MinD-Symposium on Cognitive Enhancement and Brain Training, Muenster, Germany, April 19, 2013. “The Neuroscience and Ethics of Manipulating Memory,” Brocher Foundation, Hermance, Switzerland, April 9, 2013. “Prostheses for the Will: Implications of Neuromodulation for Autonomy and Identity,” Division of Medical Ethics, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York City March 21, 2013. “Author Meets Critics: Brain, Body and Mind: Neuroethics with a Human Face.” with Craig Klugman and William Winslade, Annual Meeting of the Association for Professional and Practical Ethics, San Antonio, TX, March 2, 2013. “The Ethical Significance of Consciousness,” Apeiron Society for the Practice of Philosophy, Calgary, October 2, 2012. “Neuromodulation, Agency, and Autonomy,” Symposium “Changing the Brain, 15
Changing Society: Clinical and Ethical Implications of Neuromodulation Techniques in Neurology and Psychiatry,” University of Geneva Neuroscience Center and Brocher Foundation, Geneva, Switzerland, June 14, 2012 “How Conscious Must the Will Be to Be Free?” Institute for Biomedical Ethics, University of Geneva, June 12, 2012. “Consciousness and Neuroethics: Brain, Body, Mind and Environment Interactions” Regina Apostolorum Pontifical University, Rome, May 2-4, 2012. “Neuroscience and Psychopathy,” Montreal Neuroethics Network, Institut de recherches cliniques de Montreal, March 29, 2012. “Neuroscience and Criminal Responsibility,” Health Law Ethics Seminar, Health Law and Policy Institute, University of Houston Law School, February 9, 2012. “Neuroscience, Free Will, and Moral Responsibility,” Plan II Honors Program Public Lecture, University of Texas, Austin, TX, February 8, 2012. “Consciousness, Mind, and Personhood,” Bioethics Seminar, University of Texas, Austin, February 8, 2012. “Consciousness and the ‘Location’ of the Mind,” Institute for Medical Humanities, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, February 7, 2012. “Neuroscience and Criminal Responsibility,” John P. McGovern Memorial Award Lecture in the Medical Humanities, Institute for the Medical Humanities, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX, February 6, 2012. “The Ethical Significance of Consciousness,” Symposium on Chronic Disorders of Consciousness,” Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitat, Munich, Germany October 26, 2011. “Neuropsychiatric Aspects of Enhancing the Will,” Neuroethics Conference: Neuroenhancement, Johannes Gutenberg Universitat, Mainz, Germany, July 7, 2011. “Dialogue in Neuroscience: Challenges and Strategies,” European Union Brains in Dialogue (BID) Final Conference, Brussels, July 6, 2011. “Promoting Communication and Education in Neuroscience,” BID workshop, Brussels, July 5, 2011. “Ethical Issues in Organ, Tissue and Cell Transplantation,” Symposium Organized by the World Health Organization and Brocher Foundation, Hermance, Switzerland, May 15, 2011. “The Moral Insignificance of Death in Organ Donation,” Fondation Brocher, Hermance, Switzerland, May 5, 2011. “Persons, Brains, and Mental Illness,” W.F. Mitchell Bioethics Conference, Saskatoon City Hospital, November 19, 2010. “Consent to Psychiatric Neurosurgery,” American Society for Bioethics and Humanities 12th Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA, October 21, 2010. “Neurobiology, Decision-Making, and Criminal Responsibility,” CIHR-sponsored workshop on the Neurobiology and Ethics of Decision-Making, Jackson’s Point, Ontario, September 25, 2010. “Functional Neurosurgery and the Metaphysics of Mind,” CIHR-sponsored workshop on Ethical and Philosophical Issues in Functional Neurosurgery, Jackson’s Point, Ontario, September 23, 2010. 16
“The Blessing and Burden of Biological Psychiatry,” International Network for Philosophy and Psychiatry Annual Conference, Manchester, UK, June 29, 2010. “Consent to Deep-Brain Stimulation for Neurological and Psychiatric Disorders,” Interdisciplinary Ethics Rounds, Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary, April 14, 2010. “The Impact of Substance Abuse on the Transplant Candidacy Selection Process,” Transplant Ethics Forum, Vancouver General Hospital, December 8, 2009. “Measuring Success in Deep-Brain Stimulation,” Annual Meeting of the American Association of Neurological Surgeons, Las Vegas, December 5, 2009. “Neuroscience, Free Will, and Responsibility,” Plenary Lecture for the International Conference: Brain Matters: New Directions in Neuroethics, Halifax, September 25, 2009. “Educating Future Neuroscience Clinicians in Neuroethics: A Report of One Program’s Work-in-Progress (with Philippe Couillard and Keith Brownell), Brain Matters Conference, Halifax, September 25, 2009. “Neuroethics,” Program of European Neuroscience Schools (PENS), Summer School on Metabolic Aspects of Brain Diseases, Gunzburg, Germany, July 9, 2009. “What Neuroscience Can (and Cannot) Tell Us about Criminal Responsibility,” Law and Neuroscience Colloquium, University College London, July 6, 2009. “The Neuroethics of Memory,” Mellon Lecture in Philosophy and Psychology, Bates College, Lewiston, Maine, USA, March 27, 2009. “Free Will and Moral Responsibility in the Light of Neuroscience,” Mellon Lecture in Philosophy and Psychology, Bates College, March 26, 2009. “Conscription of Cadaveric Organs for Transplantation without Consent,” Transplant Ethics Forum, Vancouver General Hospital, December 3, 2008. “Neuroscience and Free Will,” Center for the Study of Religion and Conflict, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, October 6, 2008. “Ethical Issues in Deep-Brain Stimulation,” CIHR workshop on Deep-Brain Stimulation, Halifax, September 20, 2008. “Stimulating Brains, Altering Minds,” International Bioethics Retreat, Paris, France, June 24, 2008 “Our Brains Are Not Us,” Disorders of Body and Mind Research Group, Heidelberg, Germany, June 2, 2008. “Neuroethics: The Promise and Pitfalls of Intervening in the Brain,” Crosley Memorial Lecture, University of New England, Portland, ME, March 25, 2008. “Underestimating the Risk in Living Kidney Donation,” Interdisciplinary Ethics Rounds, University of Calgary, March 9, 2008. “Moral Responsibility and the Psychopath,” Eastern Division Meeting of the American Philosophical Association, Baltimore, MD, December 28, 2007. “Organ Donation,” Transplant Ethics Forum, Vancouver General Hospital, December 8, 2007. “Keeping One’s Cool: Some Ethical Questions about Psychopharmacological Enhancement” American Society for Bioethics and Humanities Annual Meeting, Washington, D.C., October 18, 2007. “Reading Brains and Minds: Ethical Issues in Neuroimaging,” CIHR Workshop on Vision Health and Research, York University, Toronto, August 2, 2007. 17
“The Neuroethics of Keeping One’s Cool,” Canadian Bioethics Society Annual Meeting, Toronto, June 1, 2007. “Brain Injury, Creativity, and Identity,” CIHR Workshop on Identity and Altered Cognition, Toronto, May 30, 2007. “Psychopharmacological Enhancement,” Pacific Division Meeting of the American Philosophical Association, San Francisco, April 5, 2007. “Neuroethics in the Clinic,” Foothills Hospital Ethics Committee, Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary, March 9, 2007. “Organ Donation after Cardiocirculatory Death: Ethical Issues,” Community Health Sciences Seminar, Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary, March 2, 2007. “Ethical Issues Surrounding Brain Function: Reflections on the Terri Schiavo Case,” Clinical Neurosciences Grand Rounds, Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary, October 6, 2006. “Exploring the Neurophilosophical Landscape,” CIHR New Emerging Team Meeting, Halifax, September 15, 2006. “Ethical Issues in Donation after Cardiocirculatory Death,” Medical Grand Rounds, University of Alberta Hospital, Edmonton, June 7, 2006. “Risking One’s Life to Benefit Another? Questions about Living Organ Donation,” Internal Medicine Grand Rounds, Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary, February 27, 2006. “Donation after Cardiocirculatory Death: Ethical Issues,” British Columbia Transplant Ethics Forum, Vancouver General Hospital, December 8, 2005.
Blog Contributions Impact Ethics, Dalhousie University, June 2013 (deceased organ donation); January 2016 (psychological and social aspects of Alzheimer’s disease) Neuroethics Blog, Emory University and American Journal of Bioethics-Neuroscience, November 2014 (brain implants), March 2016 (erasing memories)
Memberships in Professional Organizations Association for Professional and Practical Ethics American Society for Bioethics and Humanities American Philosophical Association Canadian Bioethics Society