ZAEC 2021: HIRe

ZAGREB APPLIED ETHICS CONFERENCE 2021: 
HARM, INTENTIONS AND RESPONSIBILITY
Zagreb, Croatia | 29 September – 1 October 2021

This conference takes place as a hybrid in-person/online event. Further instructions and access information will be sent to registered participants. Please register via form until September 28, 2021: https://forms.gle/jB9eumSDM5afiSkk8

Please indicate whether you would like to attend in person or online. Please note that places at the venue are limited due to COVID-19 regulations.

Wednesday, 29 September 2021

All times are in local time (UTC +2, CEST, Central European Summer Time)

09:30–09:40 Opening of the conference

09:40–11:00 Plenary lecture
HELEN FROWE, University of Stockholm
But It’s Mine!: The Moral Significance of Owning Harm-Preventing Resource

11:00–11:10 Coffee break

11:10–12:10 Session I
GERALDINE NG, Philosophy Lab CIC
Climate change complicity, moral hopelessness, and a Nietzschean response
KAROLINA KUDLEK, Institute of Philosophy, Zagreb | University of Twente
Moral bioenhancement and the prevention of harm

12:10–12:20 Coffee break

12:20–13:20 Session II
MARIJA PETROVIĆ, University of Belgrade
Towards A Better Understanding of Abortion
MATEJ SUŠNIK, Institute of Philosophy, Zagreb
The Intuition behind the Non-Identity Problem

13:20–15:00 Lunch break

15:00–16:00 Session III
JOSH MUND, Tulane University
Harming Others by Causing Them to Act Wrongly
IVAN CEROVAC, University of Rijeka
Epistemic Democracy, Mill’s Harm Principle and the Legislation on Contagious Diseases

16:00–16:10 Coffee break

16:10–17:10 Session IV
FEMI OMOTOYINBO, Queen’s University Belfast
The Responsibility of Non-combatants in the Face of Excusing Conditions
EZEKIEL VERGARA, Darmouth College
A Philosophical Analysis of the Combatant/Non-Combatant Distinction and Its Implications for Revolutions

17:10–17:20 Coffee break

17:20–18:20 Session V
JONAS HAEG, King’s College
Defensive Entrapment and Manipulation
KIDA LIN, University of Oxford
Harmless Torturers and Liability: A Puzzle, University of Oxford

Thursday, 30 September 2021

9:30–10.30 Session VI
CHRISTINA NICK, University of Leeds
Complicity and the Individual Difference Principle
JACK MADOCK, KU Leuven
Loss of Home: Tragedy of harm and challenge of compensation

10:30–10:40 Coffee break

10.40–11:40 Session VII
SPYRIDON STELIOS, University of Athens
Is a Moral Turing test necessary? Investigating the interconnection between artificial intelligence and ethics
ANA GRGIĆ, Institute of Philosophy, Zagreb
Narrative Identity and the Higher Brain Criterion of Death

11:40–11:50 Coffee break

11:50–12:50 Session VIII
ANTO ČARTOLOVNI, Catholic University of Croatia
Beyond intentionality, the pitfalls and promises of responsibility and liability in medical AI
FRIDERIK KLAMPFER, University of Maribor
Hate Speech: What’s the Harm?

12:50–14:30 Lunch break

14:30–15:30 Session IX
CRAIG AGULE, Rutgers University-Camden
Normative Expectations and Reactive Attitudes
DANIELLA MEEHAN, University of Glasgow
Blameworthy Vices

15:30–15:40 Coffee break

15:40–16:40 Session X
MARIA SEIM, University of Oslo
Collective responsibility and culpable ignorance
SAMUEL KAHN, Indiana University
Frankfurt Cases and Alternate Deontic Categories

16:40–16:50 Coffee break

16:50–17:50 Session XI
IRIS VIDMAR JOVANOVIĆ, University of Rijeka
Can Artists Do any Harm? Morality of Art and the State’s Responsibility Regarding the Art-Related Public Policies and Education
FRANZISKA PAULMANN, University of Kassel
NGOs as moral agents – opportunities and challenges of collective action approaches to problems of global ethics

Friday, 1 October 2021

09:30–10:30 Session XII
CRISTIAN IFTODE & ALEXANDRA ZORILA, University of Bucharest
Neurotechnologies, Narrative Identities, and Relational Authenticity
BRADLEY HILLIER-SMITH, University of Reading
The Harm of a Human Rights Violation

10:30–10:40 Coffee break

10:40–11:40 Session XIII
CONSTANTIN VICĂ & EMILIAN MIHAILOV, University of Bucharest
Is online moral outrage virtuous?
ALEX R. GILLHAM, St. Bonaventure University
Intentionally Escaping Responsibility via the Counterfactual Comparative Account of Harm

11:40-11:50 Coffee break

11:50-13:20 Session XIV
MARKO JURJAKO & MIA BITURAJAC, University of Rijeka
The role of harm in diagnosing mental disorders: An explicationist perspective
MIA BITURAJAC, University of Rijeka
Towards an Account of Harm in Mental Disorders
LUCA MALATESTI & JOHN MCMILLAN, University of Rijeka/University of Otago
The methods of neuroethics: the case of legal responsibility

13:20–15:00 Lunch break

15:00–16:00 Session XV
MARIA HEDLUND & ERIK PERSSON, Lund University
Who should obey the Three Laws of Robotics?
EMMA DORE-HORGAN, University of Oxford
‘If You’re Gonna do it, do it Right- Right?’: An Argument for Beneficence in Neurocorrection

16:00-16:10 Coffee break

16:10-17:10 Session XVI
HAYDEN WILKINSON, University of Oxford
Market harms and market benefits
ERIK PERSSON & MARIA HEDLUND, Lund University
The Trolley Problem and Isaac Asimov’s First Law of Robotics

20:30 Conference dinner