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Contributors

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Mary “Molly” Camp (MD, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston) is an associate professor in the department of psychiatry at UT Southwestern Medical Center. She specializes in geriatric mental health and cognitive and memory disorders. Dr. Camp is the director of the Neurocognitive and Geriatric Psychiatry Program in the UTSW Psychiatry Outpatient Clinic and the associate program director of the combined Psychiatry and Neurology Residency Program. She completed residency training in psychiatry at Baylor College of Medicine and UT Southwestern.

Alexander Cole (MD, University of Chicago) is the chief resident in the department of psychiatry at UT Southwestern Medical Center. After graduating from residency in 2019, he will be joining the faculty at UT Southwestern as an inpatient psychiatrist for University Hospitals. He graduated magna cum laude from Baylor University, earning a bachelor of science with a major in biochemistry and minor in great texts of the Western tradition. He attended medical school at the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine. At UT Southwestern, he is a member of the educator track and was awarded the department’s Outstanding Resident Contribution to Medical Student Education award in 2017.

C. R. Crespo (MEd, Southern Methodist University) is the associate director of the Maguire Center for Ethics and Public Responsibility and an adjunct professor in the department of corporate communications and public affairs at Southern Methodist University. Her editing experience includes Annals of Dyslexia: An Interdisciplinary Journal of The International Dyslexia Association as well as other university publications. She completed the Management Development Program at the Harvard Graduate School of Education Institute for Higher Education. She oversees the operation of SMU’s Maguire Center for Ethics and Public Responsibility and focuses her work on higher education policy and administration. Her previous experience includes extensive work in communications at domestic and international nongovernmental organizations, and public affairs and policy research for Fortune 500 companies and national professional associations.

Charles E. Curran (STD, Academia Alfonsiana and Pontifical Gregorian University) is the Elizabeth Scurlock University Professor of Human Values at Southern Methodist University. He has served as president of three national professional societies—the American Theological Society, the Catholic Theological Society of America, and the Society of Christian Ethics. He was the first recipient of the John Courtney Murray Award for Distinguished Achievement in Theology given by the Catholic Theological Society of America. In 2003, the College Theology Society gave him its Presidential Award for a lifetime of scholarly achievements in moral theology. The Society of Christian Ethics gave him its Lifetime Achievement Award in 2017. In 2010, he was elected to membership in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Dr. Curran has authored or edited more than fifty books in the area of moral theology and taught for more than twenty years at the Catholic University of America and has also taught at Cornell University, the University of Southern California, and Auburn University.

Robert J. Howell (PhD, Brown University) is a Dedman Family Distinguished Professor and is the chair of the department of philosophy at Southern Methodist University. He is the author of Consciousness and the Limits of Objectivity (Oxford University Press, 2013) as well as numerous articles on the problem of consciousness, self-knowledge, and the nature of moral character. With Torin Alter he coauthored A Dialogue on Consciousness (Oxford University Press, 2009), The God Dialogues (Oxford University Press, 2011), and coedited Consciousness and the Mind Body Problem: A Reader (Oxford University Press, 2011). Dr. Howell’s current research focuses on consciousness, self-knowledge, and the ethics of emerging technologies.

Rita Kirk (PhD, University of Missouri) is the William F. May Endowed Director of the Maguire Center for Ethics and Public Responsibility as well as an Altshuler Distinguished Professor in Corporate Communication & Public Affairs at Southern Methodist University. Her research focuses on the development and ethical targeting of public arguments, campaign communication, and a phenomenon that cannot be ignored in current discourse: hate speech. Dr. Kirk’s books include Political Empiricism: Communications Strategies in State and Regional Elections, which won the “Best Book in Applied Communication” from the National Communication Association; Hate Speech, a book analyzing implications for hate discourse in public communication, with coeditor David Slayden, which was awarded the Outstanding Book on the subject of Human Rights in North America and the James Madison Prize for work on free speech; Solo Acts: The Death of Discourse in a Wired World; and her most recent book, Political Communication in Real Time: Theoretical and Applied Research Approaches, edited with Dan Schill and Amy Jasperson. Kirk has more than thirty book chapters and articles in scholarly publications and is a frequent commentator in the media.

D. Stephen Long (PhD, Duke University) is the Cary M. Maguire University Professor of Ethics at Southern Methodist University. Dr. Long is an ordained United Methodist Minister in the Indiana Conference. He has served churches in Honduras, North Carolina, and Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Dr. Long works in the intersection between theology and ethics and has published more than fifty essays and fourteen books on theology and ethics, including Divine Economy: Theology and the Market; The Goodness of God: Theology, Church, and Social Order; John Wesley’s Moral Theology: The Quest for God and Goodness; Calculated Futures: Theology, Ethics, and Economics; Christian Ethics: A Very Short Introduction; Saving Karl Barth: Hans Urs von Balthasar’s Preoccupation; and The Perfectly Simple Triune God: Aquinas and His Legacy. Dr. Long was baptized by the Anabaptists, educated by the evangelicals, pastorally formed by the Methodists, and given his first teaching position by the Jesuits, which makes him ecumenically inclined or theologically confused.

Robin Lovin (PhD, Harvard) is the former William H. Scheide Senior Fellow at the Center of Theological Inquiry at Princeton and is the Cary M. Maguire University Professor of Ethics emeritus at Southern Methodist University. He joined the SMU faculty in 1994 and served as dean of Perkins School of Theology from 1994 to 2002. Prior to this, he was dean of the Theological School at Drew University in Madison, New Jersey, and a member of the faculty at the Divinity School of the University of Chicago. Dr. Lovin’s most recent books are Christian Realism and the New Realities and An Introduction to Christian Ethics. He has also written extensively on religion and law and comparative religious ethics. In 2013, he held the Maguire Chair in Ethics and American History at the Library of Congress. He is a Visiting Scholar at Loyola University Chicago, an Honorary Trustee of the Center of Theological Inquiry in Princeton, New Jersey, and a member of the advisory board for the McDonald Centre for Theology, Ethics, and Public Life at Oxford University.

Richard O. Mason (PhD, University of California Berkley) is the Carr P. Collins Distinguished Professor Emeritus at the Edwin L. Cox School of Business at Southern Methodist University. Dr. Mason currently serves on the Mercy Regional Medical Center Ethics Committee in Durango, Colorado, is a member of the Professional Associates advisory group at Fort Lewis College, and was recently on the board of the Women’s Resource Center. He served as director of the Maguire Center for Ethics and Public Responsibility from 1998 to 2005. The author of numerous academic articles and books, in 2001 he received the AIS Fellow LEO Award for lifelong contribution to the information systems field from the Association of Information Systems. In 1992 he was made a Foreign Fellow of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences in the Infomatics and Cybernetics section.

William F. May (PhD, Yale) is a retired professor and has since served as a visiting professor in the department of political science at Yale, a chair holder in ethics and American studies at the Library of Congress (established by Cary M. Maguire), and, most recently, a fellow at the Institute for Practical Ethics and Public Life at the University of Virginia. Earlier, he chaired the department of religious studies at Smith College and founded and chaired the department of religious studies at Indiana University. Thereafter he held the Joseph P. Kennedy Chair at the Kennedy Institute of Ethics at Georgetown University, and the Cary M. Maguire Chair in Ethics at Southern Methodist University, where he also founded and directed the Maguire Center for Ethics and Public Responsibility. Professionally, Dr. May has cochaired the research group on death and dying at the Hastings Center and served as president of the American Academy of Religion and the Society of Christian Ethics. In public life, he served on the Clinton Task Force on Health Care Reform and as a member of the President’s Council on Bioethics.

Thomas Wm. Mayo (JD, Syracuse University) is an Altshuler Distinguished Teaching Professor of Law at Southern Methodist University Dedman School of Law and adjunct professor of Internal Medicine at UT Southwestern Medical Center, where he teaches medical ethics, and is Of Counsel to Haynes and Boone, LLP. After practicing law in New York and Washington, DC, and serving as a law clerk to the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, he joined the SMU law faculty in 1984. He has taught seventeen courses, most recently Health Care Law, Bioethics and Law, Nonprofit Organizations, Public Health Law & Ethics, Legislation, Torts, and (for the past twenty-three years) a joint offering with UT Southwestern Medical School: Law, Literature and Medicine. He was a “Co-Principal Investigator” (with Prof. William F. May) in the creation of SMU’s Maguire Center for Ethics and Public Responsibility and served as its third director from 2005 to 2010.

John Sadler (MD, Indiana University) is a professor of psychiatry and clinical sciences and the Daniel W. Foster, MD Professor of Medical Ethics at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. Dr. Sadler directs the division of ethics in the department of psychiatry and is the institution-wide Director of the Program in Ethics in Science & Medicine at UT Southwestern. Dr. Sadler’s career has spanned research, education, administration, and clinical practice. His main research area has been in the philosophy and ethics realm—from clinical ethics, to research ethics, to the philosophy of psychiatry. He is editor-in-chief of the Johns Hopkins University Press journal Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology and the Oxford University Press book series International Perspectives on Philosophy and Psychiatry.

Ethics at the Heart of Higher Education

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