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  1. Professor Neil Levy. Senior Research Fellow. Professor Neil Levy has wide-ranging research interests, with a recent focus on the role of expertise in society. He has published widely on many topics, ranging from philosophy of mind to bioethics.

  2. Nov 2, 2022 · Neil Levy, Bad Beliefs: Why They Happen to Good People, Oxford University Press, 2022, 188pp., $70.00 (hbk), ISBN 9780192895325. Neil Levy’s book is a treatment of the psychology and epistemology of beliefs about matters that, as Levy pithily puts it, “are controversial but shouldn’t be” (x). Levy’s paradigm examples are beliefs about ...

  3. Senior Research Fellow. Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics. neil.levy@philosophy.ox.ac.uk. See citations webpage: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=hqLeZWcAAAAJ&hl=en. Area of Specialisation: Philosophy of Cognitive Science. Philosophy of Mind. Practical Ethics. Membership Type: Fixed-Term Tutorial & Research Fellows.

  4. Neil Levy. I am professor of philosophy at Macquarie University, Sydney and a Senior Research Fellow at the Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics, University of Oxford. I work on a broad range of topics, from belief formation to responsibility and applied ethics.

  5. Aug 13, 2007 · 1st Edition. by Neil Levy (Author) 4.1 13 ratings. See all formats and editions. Neuroscience has dramatically increased understanding of how mental states and processes are realized by the brain, thus opening doors for treating the multitude of ways in which minds become dysfunctional.

    • Neil Levy
  6. Knowledge is not merely shallowly social, in the manner recognized by social epistemology, it is also constitutively social: many kinds of knowledge only become accessible thanks to the agent's embedding in an environment that includes other epistemic agents.

  7. May 23, 2014 · Neil Levy offers the most prominent moral principles that are specifically and exclusively designed to apply to neuroethics. His two closely related principles, labeled as versions of the ethical parity principle (EPP), are intended to resolve moral concerns about neurological modification and enhancement [ 1 ].

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