1

Walter Glannon

(April 2010)

Department of Philosophy Department of Community Health Sciences

University of Calgary Faculty of Medicine

2500 University Dr. NWUniversity of Calgary

Calgary, AB, T2N 1N4, Canada 3330 Hospital Drive

Email: Calgary, AB, T2N 4N1

Phone: 403-220-3171

Professional Status

Canada Research Chair in Medical Bioethics and Ethical Theory, University of Calgary

(January 2006- )

Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of Calgary (January 2006- )

Associate Professor of Community Health Sciences, University of Calgary (January

2006- )

Education

PhD in Philosophy, YaleUniversity, November 1995. Dissertation: Responsible Persons

MA in Philosophy, YaleUniversity, April 1993

PhD in Spanish Literature, The JohnsHopkinsUniversity, May 1982. Dissertation: The

Development of Unamuno’s Ethics

MA in Spanish Literature, The JohnsHopkinsUniversity, May 1979.

BA (magna cum laude) in Philosophy and Spanish Literature, DukeUniversity, May

1977

Area of Specialization

Biomedical Ethics; Ethical Theory

Employment Experience

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, McGillUniversity,

January 2000-August 2001

Clinical Ethicist, Jewish GeneralHospital, 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, SmithCollege,

September 1983-June 1993 (tenured 1989)

Other Professional Experience

Co-Investigator, New Emerging TeamResearch Group, “States of Mind: Emerging

Issues in Neuroethics” funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health

Research (CIHR), 2006-2011.

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.

Editorial Board, Neuroethics

International Editorial Advisory Board, Policy Studies in Ethics, Law and Technology

Scientific Review Committee, University of Toronto Joint Centre for Bioethics, 2007

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

Morality Review Committee, British Columbia Children’s and Women’s Hospital,

January 2003-December 2005

Research Ethics Committee, Jewish GeneralHospital, Montreal, January 2000-May 2001

Clinical Ethics Committee, Jewish GeneralHospital, January 2000-May 2001 (Chair

September 2000-May 2001)

Clinical Ethics Fellow, MacLeanCenter for Clinical Medical Ethics, University of

ChicagoSchool of Medicine, September 1998-April 1999

Chair, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, SmithCollege, April 1991-March 1993

Peer reviewer for Canada Research Chairs

Guest Editor for Journal of Ethics in Mental Health, Volume 2 (December 2007),

Thematic issue on “Neurodiversity”

Referee for: American Journal of Transplantation,Archives of Internal Medicine, American Journal of Pharmacogenomics, American Philosophical Quarterly, Bioethics, British Medical Bulletin, Canadian Journal of Philosophy, Critical Care Medicine, Developing World Bioethics, Journal of Medical Ethics, McGraw-Hill Publishers, Medicine, Health Care & Philosophy, MITPress,Neuroethics, Oxford University Press (USA, UK, and Canada), Pediatrics & Child Health, Philosophy, Psychiatry & Psychology, Routledge Press, Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics,Wellcome Trust, Westview Press.

Teaching and Supervisory Experience

Acting Director of Undergraduate Medical Ethics Education, University of Calgary

Faculty of Medicine, August-December 2006

Medical Student Teaching (lectures and small-group case-based discussions), University

of Calgary Faculty of Medicine, January 2006-

“Neuroscience 421: History, Philosophy, Society and Ethics,” University of Calgary, fall

2010 (with Keith Sharkey, Andrew Bullock, Frank Stahnisch and Keith Brownell)

Clinical Ethics rounds for Neurology Residents, University of Calgary Faculty of

Medicine, Fall 2007- (bi-monthly)

“Biomedical Ethics,” University of Calgary, Department of Philosophy, winter and fall

2007 terms, fall 2008 term

“Bioethics and the Brain,” Graduate/Undergraduate Seminar, University of Calgary,

Department of Philosophy, winter 2006 term

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 ColumbiaMini-MedSchool, Research Ethics, April 2003

Lectures on Research Ethics for Medical Students, University of British Columbia

Faculty of Medicine, Fall 2002-Spring 2003

Director of Master’s Specialization in Bioethics, Biomedical Ethics Unit, McGill

University, September 2000-August 2001

Master’s Thesis Supervisor of 4 Students in Master’s Bioethics Program, McGill

University, 2000-2002:

Maya Goldenberg, Philosophy (“The Discourse of Bioethics”)

Dominique Robert, Nursing (“Healing in Medicine”)

Fabian Ballesteros, MD, Experimental Medicine (“Sanctity of Life”)

Natalie Bandrauk, MD, Experimental Medicine (“Medical Futility”)

PhD Thesis Co-Supervisor (with John Baker) of J. David Guerrero, Department of

Philosophy, Universityof Calgary, 2007-

PhD Thesis Co-Supervisor (with Ian Mitchell) of Kiran Pohar Manhas, Department of

Medical Science, University of Calgary, 2007-

MSc Thesis Co-Supervisor (with Ian Mitchell) of Jodie Oosman, Department of Medical

Science, University of Calgary, 2008-

Supervisor of Research Assistant, Elske Straver, Department of Philosophy, University of

Calgary, March-August 2008, Project: “Psychopathy and Social Cognition”

Seminar on Bioethical Theory, Biomedical Ethics Unit, McGillUniversity, Fall 2000

Seminar in Genetics and Ethics, Biomedical Ethics Unit/Department of

Philosophy, McGillUniversity, Winter 2000

Internal Medicine Resident Ethics Rounds, Jewish GeneralHospital, Montreal, February

2000-May 2001 (monthly)

Ethics Seminar Leader, Institute for Ethics, American Medical Association, September

1998-June 1999

Bioethics, University of Calgary, Department of Philosophy, Fall-Winter 1997-98

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, 1983-1993

Grants, Fellowships, and Awards

CIHR-funded New Emerging Team Grant, “States of Mind: Emerging Issues in

Neuroethics,” Co-Investigator($1,100,000, 2006-2011)

Canada Research Chair in Medical Bioethics and Ethical Theory, Tier 2, University of

Calgary, January 2006-December 2010 ($500,000 from CIHR)

Senior Fellowship, Institute for Ethics, American Medical Association, Chicago, IL,

September 1998-June 1999

Clinical Ethics Fellowship, MacLeanCenter for Clinical Medical Ethics, University of

ChicagoSchool of Medicine, September 1998-March 1999

Killam Post-Doctoral Fellowship, Centre for Applied Ethics, University of British

Columbia, July 1995-June 1997

Publications: Books

Bioethics and the Brain, OxfordUniversity 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, OxfordUniversity Press, 2005 (Fundamentals of Philosophy Series)

The Mental Basis of Responsibility, Ashgate Publishing, 2002

Contemporary Readings in Biomedical Ethics (ed.), Wadsworth Publishing, 2002

Genes and Future People: Philosophical Issues in Human Genetics, Westview Press,

2001

The Ethical Dimensions of Organ Donation and Transplantation (under contract with

Cambridge University Press)

Brain, Body, and Mind: Neuroethics with a Human Face (under contract with Oxford

University Press)

Publications: Articles and Chapters(*peer-reviewed)

2011. W. Glannon, “Neuroethics,” International Encyclopedia of Ethics, H. LaFollette,

ed. (London: Wiley-Blackwell, forthcoming)

2011. W. Glannon, “Neuroimaging and Neuroethics,” Encyclopedia of Applied Ethics,

2nd edition, R. Chadwick, ed. (London: Elsevier, forthcoming).*

2011. W. Glannon,“Brain Injury and Survival,” in J. Taylor, ed., The Metaphysics

and Ethics of Death (New York: Oxford University Press, forthcoming)*

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, forthcoming).*

2010. W. Glannon, “Brain, Behavior, and Knowledge,” Neuroethics (forthcoming)*

2010. W. Glannon, “Consent to Deep-Brain Stimulation for Neuropsychiatric

Disorders,” Journal of Clinical Ethics (forthcoming)*

2010. W. Glannon, “Afterword” to J. Giordano and B. Gordijn, eds., Neuroethics: The

Silent Revolution in Neuroscience—Scientific, Philosophical, and Ethical Perspectives, Cambridge University Press, 366-370.

2010. W. Glannon, ”What Neuroscience Can (and Cannot) Tell Us about Criminal

Responsibility,” in M. Freeman, ed. Legal Issues, volume 13, “Law and Neuroscience” (Oxford: Oxford University Press, forthcoming).*

2009. W. Glannon, “Neuroscience, Free Will, and Responsibility,” Journal of Ethics in

Mental Health 4 (2) (2009): e1-6.*

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: 289-292*

2009. W. Glannon, “Responsibility and Priority in Liver Transplantation,” Cambridge

Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 18: 23-35*

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 (BerlinLondon: Springer, 188-203*

2008. W. Glannon, ”Deep-Brain Stimulation for Depression,” HEC Forum 20 (4):

325-335*

2008. W. Glannon,”Organ Donation,” RoyalCollege of Physicians and Surgeons of

Canada Bioethics Education Project.*

2007. W. Glannon,”Neurodiversity,” Journal of Ethics in Mental Health 2 (3): e6-12*

2007. W. Glannon, “Constructive Memory and Memory Enhancement,” Bioethics

Forum, May 19.

2007. W. Glannon, “Persons, Metaphysics, and Ethics, American Journal of Bioethics:

Neuroscience 7 (1):68-69

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

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: 18pp.*

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*

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 andL. 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.

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 13: 201-

220.* 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: OxfordUniversity Press, 2009),

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.*

1985.W. Glannon, “The Psychology of Knowledge in El licenciado vidriera,” Revista

hispanica moderna 20 (1): 86-96.*

Publications: Reviews, Letters, and Commentaries

2010. Review of Ben Bradley, Well-Being and Death, Journal of Value Inquiry

(forthcoming)

2008. Review of R. Merkel et al., Intervening in the Brain: Changing Psyche and Society

HastingsCenter Report 38 (4): 46-47.

2008. Review of John Harris, Enhancing Evolution: The Case for Making Better People,

Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 17: 347-349

2007. Editorial for thematic issue on “Neurodiversity,” Journal of Ethics in Mental

Health, Volume 2 (November):e5.

2007. Review of 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

2007. Letter to the Editor in response to D. Brudney, “Just Deserts?”HastingsCenter

Report 32 (1): 3.

2006. Commentary on the Case of a Patient with Psychosis and Cirrhosis, Journal of

Ethics in Mental Health 1 (1): e8.

2003. Review of Jack Li, Can Death Be a Harm to the Person Who Dies?, Journal of

Medical Ethics 29: e3.

  1. “Comments on Free Will,” in Neuroethics: Mapping the Field, S. Marcus, ed.

Washington, D.C.: Dana Press, 26-27.

2002. “Neuroimaging and Determining Responsibility,” Cerebrum 4: 5-6.

1999. Review of Lawrie Reznek, Evil or Ill? Justifying the Insanity Defense, Ethics 105:

704.

1997. Review of Stephen Post, The Moral Challenge of Alzheimer Disease, Ethics 103:

547.

1983. Review of John Butt, San Manuel Bueno, martir, Modern Language Notes 98: 317-

320.

1979. Review of Victoria Camps, Pragmatica del lenguaje y filosofia analitica, Modern

Language Notes 94: 409-412.

Lectures (last five years)

“The Impact of Substance Abuse on the Transplant Candidacy Selection Process,”

Transplant Ethics Forum, VancouverGeneralHospital, 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, UniversityCollegeLondon, 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, BatesCollege, March 26, 2009.

“Conscription of Cadaveric Organs for Transplantation without Consent,” Transplant

Ethics Forum, VancouverGeneralHospital, December 3, 2008..

“Neuroscience and Free Will,” Templeton Research Lecture, Center for the Study of

Religion and Conflict, ArizonaStateUniversity, Tempe, AZ, October 6, 2008.