Life Beyond Human Boundaries: John Dupré's Philosophy and the Inter...
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About the book
Imprint
Collection
n.c
Publication date
2026-06-22
Pages
215 pages
Print ISBN
9783032269768
Language
English
Ebook informations
EAN PDF
9783032269775
Price
£0.00
EAN EPUB
9783032269775
Price
£0.00
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Sabina Leonelli holds the Chair of Philosophy and History of Science and Technology at the Technical University of Munich, where she is also Research Director of the Ethical Data Initiative, Co-Director of the Public Science Lab and lead of the ERC Project PHIL_OS. Until 2024 she was the Director of the Exeter Centre for the Study of the Life Sciences at the University of Exeter, where she holds a Honorary Professorship. She is the president of the International Society for the History, Philosophy and Social Studies of Biology (ISHPSSB) and an elected Fellow of the Academia Europaea, the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), and the Académie Internationale de Philosophie de la Science. Her research concerns the role of technology and data in knowledge production, and especially how computing and digitalisation efforts are transforming research and its social dynamics and roles; and the institutionalisation of Open Science as a window on the methods, epistemology and political economy of contemporary forms of scientific inquiry, particularly in the life and environmental sciences. Her work aims to foster both understanding of these processes and strategies for interventions to support low-resourced environments as well as planetary health.

Celso Neto is an associate professor in philosophy at the University of Exeter, where he is a member of the Centre for the Study of the Life Sciences and currently leads a large project on race and genomics funded by the European Research Council. Before joining Exeter, Celso held a postdoctoral fellowship at Dalhousie University, working across the philosophy and biochemistry and molecular biology departments. His main interest lies in understanding biological classification, as well as how biases and values influence methodologies and reasoning in science, with a particular focus on evolutionary biology and its intersection with societal issues.

Stephan Guttinger is a lecturer in philosophy at the University of Exeter, UK. He is leading a 4-year project on AI in Science funded by a Leverhulme Research Leadership Award (start September 2026). He is also co-lead of the Data, Knowledge and AI research strand at the Egenis Centre for the Study of the Life Sciences and serves as the head of research for the Exeter branch of the Ethical Data Initiative, a project jointly hosted by the University of Exeter and the Technische Universität München (TUM). Stephan’s work focuses on knowledge production in the biological laboratory, with a particular focus on issues such as experimental control, reproducibility, and the increasing use of AI-driven automation.

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