Ethics Exchange

The Ethics Exchange is an initiative that aims to integrate ethical reasoning and disciplinary expertise across the University of Lethbridge curriculum. 

Ethics education in many universities is relatively siloed. Philosophy departments offer courses in both ethical theory and applied ethics, yet these are often disconnected from the places where students actually encounter problems that call for ethical reasoning (e.g., labs, clinics, offices, field work). Meanwhile, non-philosophy faculty members often want to address ethics in their classes, but lack the time, training, or confidence to do so.

Ethics training without context thus risks being somewhat thin when it comes to current disciplinary knowledge, while ethics coverage in non-philosophy settings can result in students seeing ethics as a checklist, that is, a requirement to ‘get out of the way’. 

Drawing on the expertise that already exists at the university, the Ethics Exchange is conceived as a formal structure that connect ethicists with domain experts.

Accordingly, it is conceive along two tracks:

Track A: Ethics in Context

Philosophers bring ethics into disciplinary courses

Track B: Context in Ethics

Domain experts bring their disciplinary knowledge into ethics courses

Interested in an ethics guest lecture for your course?

Fill out an intake form here

Examples of recent ethics exchanges:

  • Chloe Crosschild (Nursing) visited PHIL 3402: Biomedical Ethics to discuss Indigenous health in Canada / Nicholas Dunn visited NURS 3121: Mental Health and Addiction to discuss MAID for mental illness
  • Masami Tatsuno (Neuroscience) visited PHIL 3402: Biomedical Ethics to discuss memory reactivation and consolidation
  • Nicholas Dunn (Philosophy) visited GEOG 4300: Climate Science, Impacts, Solutions to discuss environmental ethics