Oradores

Peter Taylor is Associate Professor, and member of the Critical and Creative Thinking (CCT) Program at the University of Massachusetts. He is also the Director of the  Program on Science, Technology & Values. He develops research on ecology and environmental studies and social studies of science and technology. In those fields he focuses on the complexity of, respectively, ecological or environmental situations and the social situations in which the environmental research is undertaken. He seeeks to promote a vision of critical science and environmental education that extends from improving the teaching of scientific concepts and methods to involving citizens in community-based research. Recently, he has begun to take these interests in a new direction through historical and sociological analysis of social epidemiological approaches that address the intersections of environment, health, and development.
Books
Unruly Complexity: Ecology, Interpretation, Engagement (2005).
Changing Life: Genomes, Ecologies, Bodies, Commodities (1997) editor with S. Halfon and P. Edward

Scott Gilbert is Professor of Biology at Swarthmore College, Philadelphia (EUA), where he teaches developmental genetics, embryology, and the history and critiques of biology. He has been Chair of the Division of Developmental and Cell Biology of the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology, and he is a member of the education committee of the Society for Developmental Biology. His research is focused in evolutionary developmental genetics.
He has recently received a grant from the National Science Foundation to work on how the turtle forms its shell, and he continues to do research and write in both developmental biology and in the history and philosophy of biology.
Books
Developmental Biology (2006, 8th edition).
Bioethics and the New Embryology:Springboards for debate (2005).
A conceptual History of Modern  Embryology (1991), editor.
Embryology: Constructing the Organism (1997) co-editor with Anne M. Raunio.

Guido van Steendam is Associate Professor of the Institute of Philosophy
Centre for Ethics, Social and Political Philosophy, Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium where he teaches philosophy of healthcare sciences and ethics of science. He is director of the International Forum for biophilosophy. His research focuses on the link between the internal dynamics of science and the social context, with particular attention to the ethical aspects of science and to how ethical values are embedded in scientific concepts, tools and practices. This research addresses traditional fields like genetics and biotechnology as well as newer fields like brain research and nanotechnologies. He is involved in several European projects and is the author of the Directory and Compendium on Biomedical Ethics in Europe (EC, 1993).

Lenny Moss is Associate Professor of the Department of Sociology and Philosophy and a Senior Fellow at the ESRC Centre for Genomics in Society, University of Exeter, UK. His research focuses on the understanding of the self-conception of what it is to be human and what it is life.  His research thus extends from what could be construed as "technical" philosophy of biology to issues in contemporary continental philosophy and critical social theory with on-going efforts at bringing these together.   
He is the author of What Genes Can't Do (2003).

Jane Calvert She did her doctoral work at Sussex in Science and Technology Studies on the idea of 'basic research'. Jane started as a research fellow at Innogen, University of Edinburgh, in July 2007. Previously she was a research fellow at Egenis, University of Exeter, and prior to that at SPRU, University of Sussex. Jane's initial work at Egenis was on genomics and intellectual property, focusing on the implications of changing ideas about the nature of genes and genomes for the patent system. Her current research is on the social dimensions and epistemic aspirations of the emerging field of systems biology. More recently she has become interested in systems biology's sister discipline: synthetic biology. At Innogen she will also be working on 'translational research', which relates to her longstanding interest in the meaning and use of policy and scientific categories.