POSTHUMAN OR PERFECTED HUMAN?

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Thursday, April 9 7:30 9:00 PM Friend Center 006 Charles E. Test, MD, Distinguished Lecture POSTHUMAN OR PERFECTED HUMAN? Biotechnical Enhancement and The History of Redemption Gilbert Meilaender *76 Senior Research Professor, Valparaiso University; Paul Ramsey Fellow, Center for Ethics and Culture, University of Notre Dame Friday, April 10 McCormick Hall 101 POLITICS, THEOLOGY, AND THE LIMITS OF ETHICS A Conference Celebrating the Work of Gilbert Meilaender *76 Cosponsored by the Berkeley Institute PANEL I 10:30 AM 12:15 PM PANEL II 1:30 3:15 PM PANEL III 3:45 5:30 PM Closing Remarks 5:45 6:15 PM

Thursday, April 9, 2015 7:30 9:00 p.m. Friend Center 006, Princeton University POSTHUMAN OR PERFECTED HUMAN? Biotechnical Enhancement and the History of Redemption Gilbert Meilaender *76 is Senior Research Professor at Valparaiso University and the Paul Ramsey Fellow at the Center for Ethics and Culture at the University of Notre Dame. He taught at the University of Virginia (1975-78), at Oberlin College (1978-96), and at Valparaiso University (1996-2014), where he held the Duesenberg Chair in Christian Ethics. Professor Meilaender is the author of many books and articles in the field of Christian ethics. Among his books are Friendship: A Study in Theological Ethics; Bioethics: A Primer for Christians; The Way that Leads There: Augustinian Reflections on the Christian Life; Should We Live Forever?: The Ethical Ambiguities of Aging; and (an edited volume of readings) Working: Its Meaning and Its Limits. He is co-editor (with William Werpehowski) of the Oxford Handbook of Theological Ethics. He has served on the Board of Directors of the Society of Christian Ethics, as an Associate Editor of Religious Studies Review, as a Consultant Editor of Studies in Christian Ethics, and as an Associate Editor of the Journal of Religious Ethics. Professor Meilaender s work in the area of bioethics is well known. He is a Fellow of the Hastings Center and was a member of the President s Council on Bioethics from 2002 to 2009. He holds the MDiv (1972) from Concordia Seminary in St. Louis and the PhD (1976) from Princeton University.

Friday, April 10, 2015 McCormick Hall 101, Princeton University POLITICS, THEOLOGY, AND THE LIMITS OF ETHICS A Conference Celebrating the Work of Gilbert Meilaender *76 Presented by the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions, Princeton University and Cosponsored by the Berkeley Institute For over three decades, the work of Gilbert Meilaender has been at the center of American theological and moral discussion. His writings have informed public policy, academic debate, and have gained a wide readership among non-specialists. Meilaender has made important contributions to contemporary debates about bioethics, human dignity, justice and the common good, and the place of religion in pluralistic societies. In the course of his work, he has been especially concerned about the nature and limits of moral reflection itself. Does human embodiment set limits on our understanding of what is right and good? How do religious beliefs about human destiny and the end of history set limits to our political aspirations and goals? Can ethics fully understand the deepest desires of the human heart? To discuss these and other questions, the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions is hosting a conference, cosponsored by the Berkeley Institute, on the thought of one of the leading ethicists of our time. It will bring together a distinguished group of theologians, philosophers, and ethicists to revisit leading themes in his work.

CONFERENCE SCHEDULE 10:30 a.m. - 12:15 p.m. Should the fact that human beings are embodied, that the body is the place of our personal presence, set limits on our understanding of what is right and good? If there are such limits, is a theological framework required to make sense of them? Paul Lauritzen, Professor of Religious Ethics, John Carroll University Gerald McKenny, Walter Professor of Theology, University of Notre Dame David H. Smith *67, Professor of Religious Studies, Emeritus, Indiana University, Bloomington Chair: Robert P. George, McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence and Director, James Madison Program, Princeton University 1:30-3:15 p.m. Does the grace of God, by which we are made whole, satisfy or uproot the deepest desire of our heart? Jennifer Herdt *94, Gilbert L. Stark Professor of Christian Ethics, Yale University Robert W. Jenson, Professor Emeritus of Religion, St. Olaf College Matthew Rose, Director and Senior Fellow, The Berkeley Institute Chair: Anna Bonta Moreland, Associate Professor, Department of Humanities, Villanova University 3:45-5:30 p.m. How, if at all, do Christian beliefs about human destiny and the end of history set limits to our political aspirations and goals? Eric Gregory, Professor of Religion, Princeton University Edmund N. Santurri, Professor of Religion and Philosophy, St. Olaf College William Werpehowski 75, Professor of Theology, Georgetown University Chair: Michael P. Moreland, Vice Dean and Professor of Law, Villanova University 5:45-6:15 p.m. Closing Remarks by Gilbert Meilaender *76, Senior Research Professor, Valparaiso University, and Paul Ramsey Fellow, Center for Ethics and Culture, University of Notre Dame

ABOUT THE JAMES MADISON PROGRAM Founded in the summer of 2000, the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions in the Department of Politics at Princeton University is dedicated to exploring enduring questions of American constitutional law and Western political thought. The Program is also devoted to examining the application of basic legal and ethical principles to contemporary problems. To realize its mission, the James Madison Program implements a number of initiatives. The Program awards visiting fellowships and postdoctoral appointments each year to support scholars conducting research in the fields of constitutional law and political thought. The Program supports the James Madison Society, an international community of scholars, and promotes civic education by its sponsorship of conferences, lectures, seminars, and colloquia. The Program s Undergraduate Fellows Forum provides opportunities for Princeton undergraduates to interact with Madison Program Fellows and speakers. The success of the James Madison Program depends on the support of foundations and private individuals who share its commitment to advancing the understanding and appreciation of American ideals and institutions. ABOUT THE BERKELEY INSTITUTE The Berkeley Institute was founded in 2011 to explore and pass on the enduring principles of reason and order that underlie intellectual and academic inquiry. These principles enable clear and generous engagement with contemporary intellectual and academic life. They can help students negotiate the diverse array of specialized expertise that confronts them in university study, to find the grounds of intellectual coherence in what they often experience as the fragmented and unrelated menu of courses they take there. And they can help students find productive relations between their intellectual work and their religious or moral commitments. The Berkeley Institute is especially committed to preparing students for positions of academic and intellectual leadership. Its programs, for undergraduate and graduate students at UC Berkeley and other area schools, help them achieve an integrated education and prepare themselves for academic careers through exploration of classical traditions and a sustained, open, and rigorous encounter with contemporary thought. The Berkeley Institute seeks to form a community of scholars both at Berkeley and elsewhere to support these efforts and exchange ideas through conferences, and programs; and, eventually, at supporting the research of graduate students and younger faculty who promise to make a difference to the culture of American higher education.

PARTICIPANTS Robert P. George holds Princeton s celebrated McCormick Chair in Jurisprudence and is the founding director of the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions. He is vice chairman of the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF). He has served on the President s Council on Bioethics and as a presidential appointee to the United States Commission on Civil Rights. He has also served on UNESCO s World Commission on the Ethics of Science and Technology, of which he continues to be a corresponding member. He is a former Judicial Fellow at the Supreme Court of the United States, where he received the Justice Tom C. Clark Award. He is the author of In Defense of Natural Law, Making Men Moral: Civil Liberties and Public Morality, The Clash of Orthodoxies: Law, Religion and Morality in Crisis, Conscience and Its Enemies: Confronting the Dogmas of Liberal Secularism, and co-author of Embryo: A Defense of Human Life, Body-Self Dualism in Contemporary Ethics and Politics, What is Marriage? Man and Woman: A Defense, and Conjugal Union: What Marriage Is and Why It Matters. His scholarly articles and reviews have appeared in such journals as the Harvard Law Review, the Yale Law Journal, the Columbia Law Review, the American Journal of Jurisprudence, and the Review of Politics. Professor George is a recipient of many honors and awards, including the Presidential Citizens Medal, the Honorific Medal for the Defense of Human Rights of the Republic of Poland, the Canterbury Medal of the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, the Sidney Hook Memorial Award of the National Association of Scholars, the Philip Merrill Award of the American Council of Trustees and Alumni, the Bradley Prize for Intellectual and Civic Achievement, and the Stanley Kelley, Jr. Teaching Award from Princeton s Department of Politics. He has given honorific lectures at Harvard, Yale, University of St. Andrews, and Cornell University. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, and holds honorary doctorates of law, ethics, science, letters, divinity, civil law, humane letters, and juridical science. A graduate of Swarthmore College and Harvard Law School, he also received a master s degree in theology from Harvard and a doctorate in philosophy of law from Oxford University. Eric Gregory is Professor of Religion at Princeton University. His interests include religious and philosophical ethics, theology, political theory, law and religion, and the role of religion in public life. He is the author of Politics and the Order of Love: An Augustinian Ethic of Democratic Citizenship (Chicago, 2008), and recent articles on just war, religion in America, and poverty. He has received fellowships from the University of Notre Dame, Harvard University, and NYU Law School. Among his current projects is a book tentatively titled, What Do We

Owe Strangers? Globalization and the Good Samaritan, which examines secular and religious perspectives on global justice. In 2007 he was awarded Princeton s President s Award for Distinguished Teaching. He serves as Director of Graduate Studies in Religion, and sits with the executive committees of the University Center for Human Values and the Interdisciplinary Doctoral Program in the Humanities. He also serves on the board of directors of the Society of Christian Ethics and is a member of the editorial boards of the Journal of Religious Ethics and Political Theology. Jennifer A. Herdt *94 is Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and Gilbert L. Stark Professor of Christian Ethics at Yale Divinity School and the Graduate School, Yale University. She is the author of Putting On Virtue: The Legacy of the Splendid Vices, and Religion and Faction in Hume s Moral Philosophy, and has served as guest editor for a special issue on Eighteenth-Century Ethics for the Journal of Religious Ethics, and on Virtue, Identity and Agency for the Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies. The recipient of Mellon Fellowship in the Humanities and an Alexander von Humboldt Research Fellowship, she has served on the Board of Directors of the Society of Christian Ethics and is an Associate Editor of the Journal of Religious Ethics. She received her BA in Religion and Biology from Oberlin College, and her MA and PhD in Religion from Princeton University. Robert W. Jenson is Professor Emeritus of Religion at St. Olaf College in Northfield, Minnesota. He is an ordained Lutheran minister. He has taught at liberal arts colleges and universities, including the University of Oxford, Princeton University, and Princeton Theological Seminary. His last permanent appointment was as Senior Scholar of the Center of Theological Inquiry in Princeton. At present he is co-director of the Institute for Theological Inquiry, which sponsors Jewish/ Christian theological working groups and is based in Princeton and Israel. He is cofounder of the Center for Catholic and Evangelical Theology, and co-founder and long-time editor or co-editor of the journals Dialog and Pro Ecclesia. He is author of 18 books, including a two-volume systematic theology, Conversations with Poppi about God, co-authored with his then eight year-old granddaughter, and most recently a commentary on the book of Ezekiel and a monograph on the Christian Canon and Creed. He is married to his closest theological collaborator, Blanche Jenson. He studied classics at Luther College in Iowa for ordination at Luther Seminary in St. Paul, philosophy at the University of Minnesota, and theology at the universities of Heidelberg and Basel.

Paul Lauritzen is Professor of Religious Ethics at John Carroll University in Cleveland. He is the author or editor of five books, including The Ethics of Interrogation: Professional Responsibility in an Age of Terror, Pursuing Parenthood: Ethical Issues in Assisted Reproduction and Cloning and the Future of Human Embryo Research. He is the past co-editor of the Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics and an associate editor of the Journal of Religious Ethics. His current research focuses on ethical issues raised by counterterrorism. He also continues to work on issues in bioethics, with a focus on assisted reproduction. He has blogged for Commonweal, a national Catholic magazine. He has held visiting appointments at St. John s University in New York, as the McKeever Chair of Moral Theology, and at Northwestern University, as the Brady Distinguished Visiting Professor of Ethics and Civic Life. He is a past recipient of a NEH Fellowship for College Teachers grant and the Distinguished Faculty Award at John Carroll University, the highest award the university confers on a faculty member. He received his BA and MA degrees from the University of Virginia and his PhD from Brown University. Gerald McKenny is Walter Professor of Theology at the University of Notre Dame. He is the author of To Relieve the Human Condition: Bioethics, Technology, and the Body, and The Analogy of Grace: Karl Barth s Moral Theology, along with many journal articles and book chapters on topics in theological ethics, bioethics, the ethics of biotechnology, comparative religious ethics, and philosophy of medicine. He is the co-editor of five books of original essays. He is currently writing a book on the normative status of human nature in debates over biomedical enhancement technologies. He received his BA from Wheaton College, his MDiv from Princeton Theological Seminary, and his PhD from the University of Chicago. Anna Bonta Moreland is an Associate Professor in the Department of Humanities at Villanova University. Her areas of research include faith and reason, medieval theology with an emphasis on Thomas Aquinas, the theology of religious pluralism, and comparative theology, especially between Christianity and Islam. She has written Known by Nature: Thomas Aquinas on Natural Knowledge of God (Herder & Herder, 2010), and edited New Voices in Catholic Theology (Herder & Herder, 2012). She is working on her next book project on prophecy in Christianity and Islam. Professor Moreland will complete this work as a visiting research fellow at the University of Notre Dame s Center for Ethics and Culture during AY 2015-2016. She received her BA in Philosophy at the University of Maryland, College Park, and her MA and PhD in Systematic Theology from Boston College.

Michael P. Moreland is Vice Dean and Professor of Law at Villanova University School of Law. His scholarly interests focus on law and religion, torts, and bioethics. Following law school, Dean Moreland clerked for the Honorable Paul J. Kelly, Jr., of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit and was an associate at Williams & Connolly in Washington, D.C. Before joining the Villanova faculty, he served as Associate Director for Domestic Policy at the White House under President George W. Bush. He was the 2010-11 Forbes Visiting Fellow at the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions at Princeton University. Dean Moreland received his BA in philosophy from the University of Notre Dame, his MA and PhD in theological ethics from Boston College, and his JD from the University of Michigan Law School. Matthew Rose is Director and Senior Fellow at the Berkeley Institute. He was previously Ennis Fellow in Humanities at Villanova University, where he taught courses in philosophy, politics, and literature. His publications include Ethics with Barth (Ashgate, 2010). He received his BA from the University of Notre Dame, and his PhD from the University of Chicago. Edmund N. Santurri is Professor of Religion and Philosophy at St. Olaf College. He has taught at St. Olaf since 1980, was Chair of the Religion Department from 1988-1991, Director of The Great Conversation program from 1996-2008, Director of the Ethical Issues and Normative Perspectives Program from 2010-2013, and is currently a member of the Advisory Committee for the college s Institute for Freedom and Community, a new public affairs program focused on engaging controversial issues from a range of perspectives in a civil way. He is the author of Perplexity in the Moral Life: Philosophical and Theological Considerations and has coedited (with William Werpehowski) The Love Commandments: Essays in Christian Ethics and Moral Philosophy. He is also the author of the Introduction to Reinhold Niebuhr s An Interpretation of Christian Ethics, newly reissued by Westminster John Knox. Recent essays include Agape as Self-Sacrifice: The Internalist View for a forthcoming volume on Love and Christian Ethics to be published by Georgetown University Press. His area of specialization is theological and philosophical, theoretical and applied ethics. In recent years he has focused on political ethics with an emphasis on the ethics of war and Christian political realism. But his teaching has ranged over a wide variety of topics in ethics, theology, philosophy, and religion and culture, including courses on the theology of C. S. Lewis and Roman Catholic theology. He received his BA and MA from the University of Virginia, and his MPhil and PhD from Yale University.

David H. Smith *67 is Professor of Religious Studies, Emeritus, Indiana University, Bloomington. He taught at Indiana University from 1967 to 2003. He chaired the department of Religious Studies from 1976 to 1984. For the last 20 years of his tenure, he directed the Poynter Center for the Study of Ethics and American Institutions, an interdisciplinary center that focused its attention on medical ethics, the teaching of ethics, and the relationship of religion and ethics. Smith s publications include Health and Medicine in the Anglican Tradition (1986), and Entrusted: The Moral Responsibilities of Trustees (1995). He is the first author of Early Warning, a set of case studies and recommended guidelines for decisions about testing for late-onset genetic diseases (1998), and Partnership with the Dying, a discussion of religious institutions and morality as they relate to care for the dying (2004). He served as a visiting professor of bioethics in the Institution for Social and Policy Studies at Yale in 2003-4 and again in 2006-7; and directed Yale s Bioethics Center from 2007-12. In 2004-6 he served as Friedricks Distinguished Visiting Professor of Ethics at DePauw University where he helped establish the Prindle Center for the Study of Ethics. William Werpehowski 75 holds the Robert L. McDevitt, K.S.G., K.C.H.S. and Catherine H. McDevitt L.C.H.S. Chair in Catholic Theology at Georgetown University. He is the author of Karl Barth and Christian Ethics: Living in Truth (Ashgate, 2014) and American Protestant Ethics and the Legacy of H. Richard Niebuhr (Georgetown University Press, 2002). He has also co-edited, with Gilbert Meilaender, The Oxford Handbook of Theological Ethics (Oxford, 2005). A former president of the Society of Christian Ethics, Werpehowski worked at Villanova University for over three decades before joining the Georgetown faculty, and directed its Center for Peace and Justice Education from 1999-2010.

NOTES:

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