Hilary Bok
Hilary Bok (born 1959) is the Henry R. Luce Professor of Bioethics and Moral & Political Theory at the Johns Hopkins University. Bok received a B.A. in Philosophy from Princeton University in 1981 and her Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1991.
She served as Associate Professor of Philosophy at Pomona College from 1997 to 2000. Bok was also a Laurance S. Rockefeller Visiting Fellow at the Princeton University Center for Human Values from 1994 to 1995. Her areas of specialization are bioethics, moral philosophy, free will, and the works of Immanuel Kant. She is a faculty member of the Berman Institute of Bioethics. Bok is the author of Freedom and Responsibility (1998), a Kantian critique of libertarian theories of free will. More recently, she has written extensively about stem cell research, most notably in The Lancet.
Her parents are the well-known academics Derek Bok and Sissela Bok and her maternal grandparents were the Swedish economist Gunnar Myrdal and the politician and diplomat Alva Myrdal, both Nobel laureates. Her paternal grandparents were the distinguished Pennsylvania jurist Curtis Bok, and Margaret Plummer Bok.[1]
Bok blogged until 2009 under the pseudonym "hilzoy" at the well-known blogs "Obsidian Wings" and "Political Animal" (the blog of The Washington Monthly magazine).[2]
References
External links
- Bok's page at Johns Hopkins University
- Princeton University Press page on Freedom and Responsibility
- Bok's page at Berman Institute of Bioethics
- "Justice, ethnicity, and stem-cell banks" co-written with Kathryn Schill and Ruth Faden, The Lancet, July 10, 2004 v364 i9429 p118 retrieved 17 December 2005
- 21st-century philosophers
- Living people
- 1959 births
- 20th-century philosophers
- American women philosophers
- Harvard University alumni
- Johns Hopkins University faculty
- Princeton University alumni, 1980–89
- American people of Swedish descent
- American women bloggers
- American philosophers
- 20th-century women writers
- 21st-century women writers
- American philosopher stubs