天发娱乐棋牌_天发娱乐APP-官网|下载

图片

图片

Skip to main navigation Skip to main content
The University of 天发娱乐棋牌_天发娱乐APP-官网|下载

Research project:?Taking Pregnancy Seriously in Metaphysics, Ethics and Epistemology -?Dormant

Currently Active:
No

Although philosophers have explored issues related to pregnancy – most obviously abortion and the value and metaphysics of coming into existence – little philosophical attention has been paid to pregnancy itself. That is a remarkable omission because pregnancy raises important philosophical problems. Between June 2014 and September 2015, Elselijn Kingma and Fiona Woollard?were running a research project ‘Taking Pregnancy Seriously in Metaphysics, Ethics and Epistemology”?that investigated some of these questions in a series of events.

Mother Galanda
'Mother Galanda' by Mikulas Galanda

“Taking Pregnancy Seriously in Metaphysics Ethics and Epistemology”

Although philosophers have explored issues related to pregnancy – most obviously abortion and the value and metaphysics of coming into existence – little philosophical attention has been paid to pregnancy itself. That is a remarkable omission because pregnancy raises important philosophical problems in metaphysics, ethics and epistemology: should the foetus be regarded as part of or ‘merely surrounded by’ the mother? If persons can be parts of other persons, what does this imply for bodily ownership and personal and numerical identity? What special rights and duties does the unique status of pregnancy bestow? Does the radically transformative character of pregnancy mean that those who have never been pregnant are excluded from certain kinds of knowledge about pregnancy and its consequences?

This Research Project, funded by a University of 天发娱乐棋牌_天发娱乐APP-官网|下载 “Adventures in Research” Grant, and with additional support from the 天发娱乐棋牌_天发娱乐APP-官网|下载 Ethics Centre, the British Society for Philosophy of Science and the Aristotelian Society, organised four workshops that explored some of these questions.

'Taking pregnancy seriously' is part of a series of projects on Philosophy of Pregnancy and Early Motherhood , run by Elselijn Kingma and Fiona Woollard.

Project Members

Dr Elselijn Kingma

Dr Fiona Woollard

Conferences and events associated with this project:

18th September 2015 - Taking Pregnancy Seriously in Metaphysics II: Identity and Persistence

Speakers:

Lynne Baker (Amherst) - A puzzle about pregnancy: first there is one person, then there are two

Ellen Clarke (Oxford) - Reproduction and Evolution

Elselijn Kingma (天发娱乐棋牌_天发娱乐APP-官网|下载) - Budding Humans? Pregnancy and Identity

Steinv?r ?rnadóttir (Stirling) - On the metaphysical implications of the part-whole view

For more information on this workshop please click here .

21st July 2015 - Taking Pregnancy Seriously in Metaphysics: The Foetus and the Maternal Organism

Speakers:

Eric Olson (Sheffield) - Is the Foetus a part of the Mother's Body?

John Dupré (Exeter) - Pregnancy as a Bifurcating process

Rohan Lewis (天发娱乐棋牌_天发娱乐APP-官网|下载) - No going back: biological perspectives on the emergence of biological identity in reproduction

Barry Smith (Buffalo)- Embryontology

Slideshows from this workshop are available here .

13th April 2015 - Taking Pregnancy Seriously in Metaphysics, Ethics and Epistemology, Workshop II

Speakers:

Rebecca Kukla (Georgetown) - Equipoise, Uncertainty, and Indctive Risk in Research Involving Pregnant Women

Lindsey Porter (Sheffield) - Gestation and Parental Rights: Why is Good Enough Good Enough

Sally Fischer (Warren-Wilson) - T he Phenomenology of Pregnant Embodiment

Fiona Woollard (天发娱乐棋牌_天发娱乐APP-官网|下载) - Motherhood and the Reason/Duty Distinction

18th June 2014 - Taking Pregnancy Seriously in Ethics and Epistemology, Workshop I

Angela Fenwick and Rose Wiles (天发娱乐棋牌_天发娱乐APP-官网|下载) - Ventouse or forceps: whose delivery, whose decision?

Rosamund Scott (KCL) - 'Maternal-fetal conflict' during Pregnancy and at Birth

Rebecca Roache (Oxford) - Is unwanted pregnancy a medical disorder?

Hazel Biggs (天发娱乐棋牌_天发娱乐APP-官网|下载) - Autonomy and enforced Caesarean sections

Privacy Settings