Skip to main content Accessibility help
×

About this Cambridge Elements Series

Bioethics and neuroethics play pivotal roles in today’s debates in philosophy, science, law, and health policy. With the rapid growth of scientific and technological advances, their importance will only increase. This series provides focused and comprehensive coverage in both disciplines consisting of foundational topics, current subjects under discussion and views toward future developments. 

Elements in this series will address areas in which these fields overlap as well as where each is distinctive.


About the Editor - Thomasine Kushner

Thomasine Kushner, PhD, philosopher, is founder and Editor of the Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics.  Retired from the University of California at Berkeley, she serves as Professor of Neuroethics and Director of Professional Development in the Program in Medicine and Human Values at California Pacific Medical Center, San Francisco, USA. She lives part time in Paris where she coordinates the International Bioethics Retreat, an opportunity for bioethicists from around the world to share their current research projects, the Cambridge Consortium for Bioethics Education, a growing network of bioethics educators and the Cambridge-ICM Neuroethics Network, providing a setting and opportunity for leading brain scientists and ethicists to exchange information and learn from each other.

Contact the Editor

If you would like more information about this series, or are interested in writing an Element, please contact Thomasine Kushner at [email protected].

Areas of Interest Include:

  • Artificial Intelligence 
  • Autonomy 
  • Consciousness 
  • Enhancement 
  • Free Will 
  • Genetics 
  • Human and Animal Experimentation 
  • Informed Consent 
  • Life and Death Issues 
  • Moral Decision-making 
  • Neuroimaging 
  • Neurolaw 
  • Organ Transplantation 
  • Personal Identity 
  • Reproduction 
  • Resource Allocation 
  • Synthetic Biology 
  • Theory of Mind 
  • Truth-telling