The CEU Department of Philosophy cordially invites you to a talk
(as part of its Departmental Colloquium series)
by
Tim Lewens (University of Cambridge)
on
Against the Division of Advisory Labour: The Case of Mitochondrial Donation
Tuesday, 26 January 2016, 5.30 PM, Zrinyi 14, Room 412
ABSTRACT
In 2015, the UK became the first country in the world to make legal a set of
'mitochondrial donation' techniques. These new reproductive technologies have the
potential to enable women with diseases that are normally inherited via the mitochondrial
genome to have children with healthy mitochondria. The extensive deliberations that
preceded the legalization of these techniques involved a form of division of advisory
labour that is common when new technologies are introduced. Groups like the Nuffield
Council on Bioethics focused on the ethics of mitochondrial donation, while scientific
issues were instead given over to more specialised groups of technical advisors. I use the
case of mitochondrial donation to argue against the possibility of any strict separation
of scientific and ethical evaluation, and also to argue that efforts to divide labour in
these ways threaten to obscure important controversies around new technologies. I close by
showing how these worries relate to more general philosophical issues around the
'value-ladenness' of science.
Krisztina Biber
Department of Philosophy
Coordinator
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Central European University
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Office: + 36.1.327.3806 | biberk(a)ceu.hu |
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