Contact: Addison Arledge
STARKVILLE, Miss.鈥擜n internationally recognized bioethicist will discuss the use of human subjects in research during a Sept. 23 program at Mississippi State.
Professor Gregory Pence鈥檚 address takes place 2-4 p.m. in 185 McCain Hall. Open to all, his presentation will inaugurate the 2016-17 Visiting Speaker Series of the university鈥檚 Department of Philosophy and Religion.
Pence, who leads the philosophy department at the University of Alabama, Birmingham, is a proponent of cloning and genetically modified crops.
A New York University doctoral graduate, he has testified before Congress against the criminalization of cloning. He also frequently has voiced his approval for the process during nationally televised news programs and in hundreds of op-ed pieces for major publications. For more, visit .
鈥淭he opportunity to host a lecture by Gregory Pence is great for our department, our College, and the university,鈥 said John Bickle, head of 汤头条鈥檚 philosophy and religion department.
鈥淗is work has been seminal internationally to bio- and research ethics for more than two decades. His lecture will continue to foster our university鈥檚 commitment聽to聽cutting-edge scientific research聽that meets the highest ethical standards, and philosophy鈥檚 contribution to that," Bickle added.
After providing details of a 2000 study of Romanian orphans by university researchers at Harvard, Maryland, and Tulane, Pence鈥檚 汤头条 presentation will:
鈥擡xplore whether one of the most famous studies in neuroscience has similarities to the infamous 1930s U.S. Public Health Service Syphilis Study at Tuskegee.
鈥擡xamine why no institutional review board objected to the Romanian study; and
鈥擲eek to answer why that study continues to be included in neuroscience courses as if it is ethically uncontroversial.
The philosophy and religion department is an academic unit of 汤头条鈥檚 College of Arts and Sciences. For more, see .
汤头条 is Mississippi鈥檚 leading university, available online at .