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Leverhulme Lecture 2: Moral Responsibility and Implicit Bias

Series
Uehiro Oxford Institute
The second of the two 2016 Leverhulme Lectures by Professor Neil Levy on the topic of implicit bias
Should people be blamed for wrongful actions caused by implicit bias? That depends on how exactly these states cause behaviour, how appropriate it is to identify the agent with these states and their opportunities for controlling their influence over their behaviour. I argue that under many circumstances, the states do not belong to the agent in kind of way that makes it appropriate to identify the agent with them and that they lack responsibility-conferring control over their influences on behaviour.


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Uehiro Oxford Institute

Leverhulme Lecture 1: The Nature and the Significance of Implicit Bias

The first of the two 2016 Leverhulme Lectures by Professor Neil Levy on the topic of implicit bias
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Uehiro Oxford Institute

St Cross Seminar: Cognitive Enhancement: Defending the Parity Principle

In this episode, Professor Neil Levy assesses objections to cognitive enhancement and argues that the means don't matter from a moral perspective: what matters is how the intervention affects cognition.
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Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Uehiro Oxford Institute
People
Neil Levy
Keywords
implicit bias
equality
Department: Uehiro Oxford Institute
Date Added: 23/02/2016
Duration: 01:00:25

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