4.8 • 729 Ratings
🗓️ 10 April 2025
⏱️ 58 minutes
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This lecture was given on March 3rd, 2025, at Indiana University.
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About the Speaker:
William B. Hurlbut is a physician and Adjunct Professor in the Department of Neurobiology at Stanford University Medical Center. After receiving his undergraduate and medical training at Stanford, he completed postdoctoral studies in theology and medical ethics, studying with Robert Hamerton-Kelly, the Dean of the Chapel at Stanford, and subsequently with the Rev. Louis Bouyer of the Institut Catholique de Paris. His primary areas of interest involve the ethical issues associated with advancing biomedical technology, the biological basis of moral awareness, and studies in the integration of theology and philosophy of biology. He was instrumental in establishing the first course in biomedical ethics at Stanford Medical Center and subsequently taught bioethics to over six thousand Stanford undergraduate students in the Program in Human Biology. Dr. Hurlbut is the author of numerous publications on science and ethics including the co-edited volume Altruism and Altruistic Love: Science, Philosophy, and Religion in Dialogue (2002, Oxford University Press), and “Science, Religion and the Human Spirit” in the Oxford Handbook of Science and Religion. He has organized and co-chaired three multi-year interdisciplinary faculty projects at Stanford University, “Becoming Human: The Evolutionary Origins of Spiritual, Religious and Moral Awareness,” “Brain Mind and Emergence,” and the ongoing “The Boundaries of Humanity: Human, Animals, and Machines in the Age of Biotechnology.” In addition, he was Co-leader, together with U.C. Berkeley professor Jennifer Doudna of “The challenge and opportunity of gene editing: a project for reflection, deliberation and education.”
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0:00.0 | Welcome to the Tomistic Institute podcast. |
0:06.2 | Our mission is to promote the Catholic intellectual tradition in the university, the church, and the wider public square. |
0:12.7 | The lectures on this podcast are organized by university students at Temistic Institute chapters around the world. |
0:19.3 | To learn more and to attend these events, visit us at to mystic institute.org. |
0:25.7 | What I want to talk with you about tonight is based on a big project I run at Stanford. |
0:32.4 | It's an $11 million multi-year project called the boundaries of humanity, humans, animals, and machines |
0:38.9 | in the age of biotechnology. |
0:41.5 | And the reason this project came into being is I served on the President's Council on Bioethics |
0:49.5 | during the Bush administration. |
0:50.8 | I realized that we as a society were not contending with these difficult |
0:55.8 | issues at the depth they needed to be. And so we set up this multidisciplinary group at Stanford |
1:04.8 | with people from all over the universities, including five heads of departments, |
1:11.6 | five former present deans, and we're dialoguing |
1:15.9 | on these very, very deep challenges to our human future. |
1:23.1 | So the boundaries of humanity. |
1:27.3 | So I thought it'd be interesting to start with this. |
1:29.5 | I gave a talk at a conference at Harvard a few years back, and this was the poster for it. |
1:38.3 | I thought it was quite interesting. |
1:41.1 | Editorial aspirations. |
1:43.0 | Human hands, what Aristotle called the tool of tools, |
1:47.0 | the symbol of our distinctive body form and unique capacities of mind, |
1:53.0 | our comprehension, our creativity, and our control over the world in which we dwell. |
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