Events: detail
Lunchtime lecture: Bioethics and how it interacts with Political Decision-making
- Hosted by:
- Birkbeck University of London
- Speaker:
-
Professor Ian Gibson, MP for Norwich North
- Starts:
- November 07, 2007 at 01:00 pm
- Ends:
- November 07, 2007 at 02:00 pm
- Location:
- Birkbeck College, University of London, Room B33, Malet Street, London, WC1E 7HX United Kingdom
- Maps:
Description
Bioethics
Birkbeck is proud to present its fourth series of public lunchtime lectures, on the theme of Bioethics. The speakers represent different aspects of the debate around recent and future scientific advances. David Latchman, the current Master of the College, is a scientist of international repute, and previous head of a centre for biological research. Ian Gibson is another scientist, but also an MP, who for some years chaired the Commons select committee for science. Onora O’Neill is a philosopher and public intellectual whose work has engaged particularly with bioethical issues.
The lectures are designed to share with a wider public some of the extraordinary intellectual activity fostered at Birkbeck. The talks are free to all, on a first come first seated basis, and are held at lunchtime (1pm start) in room B33 of Birkbeck’s Malet Street site, in the heart of Bloomsbury.
In recent years, science has developed an ever deeper understanding of the biological mechanisms of human life, and the possibility of manipulating cells and genes in the service of medical care now lie before us. But profound ethical questions are raised by such possibilities. The use of stem cells, xenotransplantation, genetic screening, and cloning are among the most well-known issues. However, other matters are also of concern: who ‘owns’ biological and genetic information? How equal will access be to treatments developed using these technologies? What do these new areas of biological knowledge do to our conceptions of others – and of ourselves – as human beings?
Dr Ian Gibson is MP for Norwich North, having joined Parliament in the 1997 election. He has a PhD in genetics, and was previously Dean of the School of Biological Sciences at the University of East Anglia. Previously a highly effective chair of the Commons select committee for Science and Technology (2001–2005), he has been described by The Guardian newspaper as ‘an important and active scientific voice in the Commons’.
- Registration required:
- No
- Free:
- Yes
Additional information
All talks begin 1pm, Room B33, Birkbeck, Malet Street, London WC1. First come, first seated.
For more information
- Contact person:
- Birkbeck External Relations
- Email:
- lunchlectures [ at ] bbk.ac.uk
- Website:
- Lunchtime lecture: Bioethics and how it interacts with Political Decision-making
