
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Episode 120: John Basl, Associate Professor of Philosophy at Northeastern University, tells us why we need to think of ethics as currency in all areas including business, technology, and machine learning.
Guest Biography
John received his PhD from the University of Wisconsin – Madison in 2011. His work focuses on issues in ethics, especially applied ethics, and in the philosophy of biology. In ethics, much of his work has focused on issues of moral status. Within environmental ethics, John has focused on the question of whether non-sentient organisms and collectives can be said to have interests and whether such interests are morally relevant. Within bioethics, his focus has been on whether and how the moral status of non-human research subjects might be altered. In addition to issues of moral status, he is also interested in the ethics of environmental restoration and the ethics of biotechnology more generally. In the philosophy of biology, John's work has primarily been concerned with the levels of selection where his focus has been on whether collectives, such as biotic communities and ecosystems, might be units of selection distinct from the individuals that compose them.
In this episode, you'll learn:
Show notes: http://www.inspiredmoney.fm/120
Find more from our guest:
Mentioned in this episode:
Runnymede Money Tip of the Week
To share your thoughts:
To help out the show:
Special thanks to Jim Kimo West for the music.
By Andy Wang, Runnymede Capital Management5
106106 ratings
Episode 120: John Basl, Associate Professor of Philosophy at Northeastern University, tells us why we need to think of ethics as currency in all areas including business, technology, and machine learning.
Guest Biography
John received his PhD from the University of Wisconsin – Madison in 2011. His work focuses on issues in ethics, especially applied ethics, and in the philosophy of biology. In ethics, much of his work has focused on issues of moral status. Within environmental ethics, John has focused on the question of whether non-sentient organisms and collectives can be said to have interests and whether such interests are morally relevant. Within bioethics, his focus has been on whether and how the moral status of non-human research subjects might be altered. In addition to issues of moral status, he is also interested in the ethics of environmental restoration and the ethics of biotechnology more generally. In the philosophy of biology, John's work has primarily been concerned with the levels of selection where his focus has been on whether collectives, such as biotic communities and ecosystems, might be units of selection distinct from the individuals that compose them.
In this episode, you'll learn:
Show notes: http://www.inspiredmoney.fm/120
Find more from our guest:
Mentioned in this episode:
Runnymede Money Tip of the Week
To share your thoughts:
To help out the show:
Special thanks to Jim Kimo West for the music.

3,242 Listeners

1,312 Listeners

543 Listeners

752 Listeners

56,944 Listeners

70 Listeners

1,062 Listeners

357 Listeners