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Brian D. Earp

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'''Brian D. Earp''' is contributing writer at ''The Atlantic'', Associate Director, Yale-Hastings Program in Ethics and Health Policy at The Hastings Center and Research Fellow at the Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics.
{{FromIntactWiki|Title=Brian Earp|URL=http://intactwiki.org/w/index.php?titleBiography and overview =Brian_Earp&oldid=2374}}<blockquote>Brian D. Earp is Associate Director of the Yale-Hastings Program in Ethics and Health Policy at Yale University and The Hastings Center, and a Research Associate Fellow in Science and the Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics at the University of Oxford and a Visiting Scholar at the Hastings Center Bioethics Research Institute. His work is cross-disciplinarycrossdisciplinary, following training in philosophy, cognitive science, psychology, philosophy, history and sociology of science and medicine, and ethics. His research has been covered in ''Nature'', ''Popular Science'', ''The Chronicle of Higher Education'', ''The Atlantic'', ''New Scientist'', and other major outlets; he has also been cited in the U.S. President’s Commission on Bioethics in ''Gray Matters: Topics at the Intersection of Neuroscience, Ethics, and Society'', and in a landmark British high court case by Sir James Munby.<ref name=CurrVitae>{{REFweb |url=https://oxford.academia.edu/BrianDEarp/CurriculumVitae |title=Earp, Curriculum Vitae |date=2019-08 |accessdate=2020-02-09}}</ref> In 2016, he was invited by the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences to serve as one of a small group of “high-level experts” reporting to the Dutch government on the replication crisis in science and medicine; he later served as a peer reviewer on the final report. He was also invited to submit materials based on his work in gender and sexuality to a special committee of the European Parliament; this work has served now been published as part of a monograph series produced by the same.<ref name=CurrVitae/> Earp is co-recipient of the 2018 Daniel M. Wegner Theoretical Innovation Prize from the Society for Personality and Social Psychology. He is also recipient of both the Robert G. Crowder Prize in Psychology and the Ledyard Cogswell Award for Citizenship from Yale University, where he was elected President of the ''Yale Philosophy Society'' as an undergraduate as well as Editor-in-Chief of the Yale Philosophy Review . He then conducted graduate research in psychological methods as well as Guest Editor a Henry Fellow of New College at the Journal University of Medical Ethics (currently Associate Editor)Oxford. While at Oxford, he completed additional coursework in the philosophy of science and has seen his work as both a scientist and philosopher covered philosophy of mind, which he went on to publish in peer-reviewed journals. He also conducted graduate research in Naturethe history, New Scientistphilosophy, Popular Scientist, New Humanistand sociology of science, New York Magazinetechnology, and The Atlantic (among other outlets), medicine as well a Cambridge Trust Scholar and Rausing Award recipient at Trinity College at the University of Cambridge.<ref name=CurrVitae/> After spending a year in residence as featured the inaugural Presidential Scholar in print or Bioethics at The Hastings Center in broadcast segments by the BBCGarrison, New York, Brian is now a Gordon Fellow, Irene Battell Larned Fellow, CNNMcDougall Writing Fellow, ABCBenjamin Franklin Graduate Fellow, and several leading international newspapersPh.D. student in philosophy and psychology at Yale University, having been jointly admitted to both departments. His work has also essays have been cited by the President’s Commission on Bioethics in Gray Matters: Topics at the Intersection of Neurosciencetranslated into Polish, German, Italian, Spanish, French, EthicsPortuguese, and SocietyHebrew.<ref name=CurrVitae/blockquote>
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