Robbie Arrell is International Research Fellow in the School of Philosophy at Wuhan University (China). He previously held positions at the University of Melbourne and Monash University (Australia). His main research interests are political philosophy and ethics (both normative and applied).
Lewis Coyne received his Ph.D. from the University of Exeter (UK) in 2018, where he also obtained an M.Res. in Science and Technology Studies. His principal research interests are practical ethics, the philosophy of nature, and philosophical anthropology. His monograph, Hans Jonas: Life, Technology, and the Horizons of Responsibility, is forthcoming with Bloomsbury.
John Danaher is a lecturer in the School of Law at NUI Galway (Ireland). His research interests lie, broadly, in the areas of ethics, the philosophy of law, and emerging technologies. He has published numerous articles on human enhancement, brain-based lie detection, the philosophy of punishment, and artificial intelligence. He writes the blog Philosophical Disquisitions, and is an affiliate scholar at the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies.
Brian D. Earp is Associate Director of the Yale-Hastings Program in Ethics and Health Policy at Yale University and The Hastings Center (USA). His work is interdisciplinary, combining philosophy, psychology, and bioethics. He holds degrees from the universities of Yale, Oxford, and Cambridge.
Kathryn B. Francis is currently Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Department of Philosophy and School of Psychology at the University of Reading (UK). Prior to starting her postdoctoral position, Kathryn completed her Ph.D. in moral psychology at the University of Plymouth (UK).
Lily Eva Frank received her Ph.D. from the Graduate Center of the City University of New York (USA) in 2014. She is Assistant Professor in the Department of Philosophy and Ethics at the Eindhoven University of Technology (The Netherlands). Her research focusses on the ethics of technology, biomedical ethics, and moral psychology.
Walter Glannon is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Calgary (Canada). He is the author of Bioethics and the Brain (2007), Brain, Body, and Mind: Neuroethics with a Human Face (2011), and editor of Free Will and the Brain: Neuroscientific, Philosophical and Legal Perspectives (2015).
Valerie Gray Hardcastle is St. Elizabeth Healthcare Executive Director of the Institute for Health Innovation, and Vice President for Health Innovation at Northern Kentucky University (USA).
Michael Hauskeller is Head of the Department of Philosophy at the University of Liverpool (UK), and author of Better Humans? Understanding the Enhancement Project (2013), Sex and the Posthuman Condition (2014), and Mythologies of Transhumanism (2016).
Pei-Hua Huang is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Philosophy at Monash University (Australia). Her project focusses on how moral enhancement may impact on both personal and political autonomy. She is also interested in conceptions of disease, just health care, and moral responsibility.
Michał Klincewicz is Assistant Professor in the Department of Cognitive Science, Institute of Philosophy at Jagiellonian University, Kraków (Poland) and was a postdoctoral researcher at the Berlin School of Mind and Brain. He received his Ph.D. in philosophy at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York in 2013. His research focusses on temporal aspects of cognition and ethical problems connected to artificial intelligence.
Aleksandra Kulawska is a Ph.D. student at the University of Birmingham, where she researches the prospective impact of climate change on temperate forests. She obtained her M.Sc. in Environmental Protection and Management from the University of Edinburgh, and her Batchelor's degree in Philosophy from the University of Exeter (UK). Her research interests include ecosystem science, plant ecology, and environmental philosophy.
Teodora Manea studied philosophy in Romania and Germany. Since 2010 she has been working for the University of Exeter (UK), teaching medical humanities and medical sociology. She also works as an ethics expert for the European Commission and does further research in the areas of ethics of care and medical sociolinguistics.
Inmaculada de Melo-Martín is Professor of Medical Ethics at Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University (USA). She holds a Ph.D. in Philosophy and an M.S. in Biology. Her research focusses on ethical and epistemological issues related to biomedical sciences and technologies. She has published extensively on those topics in both philosophy and science journals. Her most recent book is Rethinking Reprogenetics (2017).
Norbert Paulo is a lecturer in practical philosophy at the University of Graz and the University of Salzburg (Austria). He holds a Ph.D. in Philosophy from the University of Hamburg (Germany), where he studied both philosophy and law. His research concerns applied ethics, ethical theory, the philosophy of law, and empirical ethics. His monograph The Confluence of Philosophy and Law in Applied Ethics was published in 2016. He is also co-editor (with Christoph Bublitz) of a forthcoming special issue of Neuroethics on moral enhancement.
Nigel Pleasants is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy and Sociology at the University of Exeter (UK). He works and has published on Wittgenstein and ethics (particularly the idea of moral certainty and its application to the wrongness of killing and to progressive moral change), institutional wrongdoing, philosophical issues arising from the Holocaust, genocide and slavery, and animal ethics.
Mark Rowlands (D.Phil., Oxon.) is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Miami (USA). He is the author of eighteen books, translated into more than twenty languages, and over a hundred journal articles, book chapters, and reviews. His primary areas of research are the philosophy of mind and ethics.
Elizabeth Shaw is a lecturer in criminal law and criminology at the University of Aberdeen (UK), and a director of the Justice Without Retribution Network. Her primary research interests are criminal responsibility, penal theory, and moral uncertainty. She has written on the moral enhancement of offenders, psychopathy, and free will.
John R. Shook is Research Associate in Philosophy, University at Buffalo, New York, and also Lecturer in Philosophy, Bowie State University, Maryland (USA). His research areas include philosophical psychology, moral neuroscience, and neuroethics. He co-edited Neuroscience, Neurophilosophy, and Pragmatism (2014), and his articles have appeared in Neuroethics, AJOB-Neuroscience, and the Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics.
Edward Skidelsky teaches philosophy at the University of Exeter (UK). His previous books include Ernst Cassirer (2008) and How Much is Enough? (with Robert Skidelsky; 2012). He is currently writing a history of virtue and vice.
Marta Sokólska graduated from Jagiellonian University (Poland) with a Batchelor's degree in Sociology and a Master's degree in Cognitive Science. She has a particular interest in the issue of moral education and moral development, focussing on global education and its methods.
Sylvia Terbeck is a social psychologist and lecturer at the University of Plymouth (UK). Her research involves group processes and morality using interdisciplinary methods, such as psychopharmacology and immersive virtual reality. She has published numerous scientific papers and a book about the social neuroscience of intergroup relations.
Peter Shiu-Hwa Tsu received his Ph.D. from the Australian National University in 2011 and is currently an associate professor in Chung Cheng University in Taiwan. His research interests include particularism in ethics and aesthetics, bioethics, and free will. His articles have appeared in the journals Philosophical Studies and Erkenntnis, amongst others. He was recently commissioned to write an entry on particularism for Oxford Bibliographies Online.
Giuseppe Turchi is Collaborator for Teaching and Research Activities (Cultore della Materia) in the Department of Humanities, Social Sciences, and Cultural Industries at the Università degli Studi di Parma (Italy). His research interests include pragmatism, neuroethics, and naturalism.
Anna Frammartino Wilks received her Ph.D. from the University of Toronto and is currently Senior Instructor in Philosophy at Acadia University (Canada). Her research interests are metaphysics, epistemology, and ethics in Kant and Early Modern Philosophy; causality, substance, and the self; and the application of Kant's thought to problems in the philosophy of biology, mind, and artificial intelligence.
Harris Wiseman is a fellow of the International Society for Science and Religion. He gained his Ph.D. in Divinity from the University of Cambridge (UK), where he worked as a research associate. He is author of The Myth of the Moral Brain: The Limits of Moral Enhancement (2016).