East College Room 204
Amy teaches “Practical Ethics,” “Biomedical Ethics,” “The Ethics of Punishment and Forgiveness,” "Environmental Ethics," and "Ethical Theory." Her current research projects focus on (1) the relationship between care ethics and internal family systems therapy and (2) fear, courage, and relational resilience in the ethics classroom. Her recent publications include "Queer Care and Pleasure Activism" forthcoming in The Bloomsbury Handbook of Care Ethics, "Teaching Moral Emotions" with Daniel Haggerty in Teaching Ethics, "Obstacles to Empathetic Listening After Sexual Violence" with Elspeth Campbell '18 in Hypatia, and "Blaming from Inside the Birdcage: Strawsonian Accounts of Blame and Feminist Care Ethics" in Feminist Philosophy Quarterly. Amy also serves as the Director of the Ethics Across Campus & the Curriculum program and she is currently leading work on the Dickinson Core Values Project. She welcomes students to contact her with questions about the Ethics minor, or just to chat about Nietzsche, care ethics, Severance, or The Good Place.
PHIL 104 Practical Ethics
This course introduces students to contemporary debates in practical ethics. Course materials investigate how theoretical approaches to ethics apply to practical issues, including discussions of animal ethics, environmental ethics, reproductive ethics, civil disobedience, and the ethics of mass incarceration and the death penalty. This course is best suited for students interested in thinking about the relationship between ethical theory and practice, with an emphasis on how power, privilege, and responsibility intersect in our everyday lives.
PHIL 253 The Ethics of Punish & Forgive
Explorations of specific figures, texts, and issues in historical and contemporary theory. Prerequisite: one prior course in philosophy or permission of the instructor.
PHIL 302 Ethical Theory
This seminar will explore major issues or texts in classical or contemporary moral philosophy. Prerequisites: three prior courses in philosophy, at least two at the 200 level, or permission of the instructor. Offered at least once every two years.
PHIL 500 Independent Study
PHIL 550 Independent Research
PHIL 104 Practical Ethics
This course introduces students to contemporary debates in practical ethics. Course materials investigate how theoretical approaches to ethics apply to practical issues, including discussions of animal ethics, environmental ethics, reproductive ethics, civil disobedience, and the ethics of mass incarceration and the death penalty. This course is best suited for students interested in thinking about the relationship between ethical theory and practice, with an emphasis on how power, privilege, and responsibility intersect in our everyday lives.
PHIL 220 Biomedical Ethics
A study of ethical issues arising in the context of medical practice, biomedical research, and health related policy making, with focus on the ethical concepts, theories and reasoning methods developed to clarify and resolve these issues.
PHIL 500 Independent Study
PHIL 550 Independent Research