Hans Bernhard
Angela Kallhoff
(Vienna)
about

Angela Kallhoff is a Professor of Ethics with Special Emphasis on Applied Ethics at the University of Vienna, where she also chairs the Ethics department. She has a distinguished academic career with previous positions at the University of Cologne, the University of Münster, and the University of Chicago. At the Center of Environmental Research in Münster, Kallhoff explored the theoretical foundation of plant ethics and ethical naturalism and continued research on plants in the project “New Directions of Plant Ethics”. As a Feodor-Lynen Fellow of the Humboldt Foundation Kallhoff developed an interdisciplinary theory of public goods (Why Democracy Needs Public Goods, Lexington 2011). More recently, her research focuses on climate ethics (Climate Justice and Collective Action, Routledge 2021), the ethics of war and peace and moral capacities of animals and of human beings (Der Mensch – das moralische Tier, Suhrkamp 2022). She has led numerous interdisciplinary projects and served as director of the research platform Nano-Norms-Nature. She contributes significantly to ethical discourse through her publications and teaching initiatives.

about

Angela Kallhoff is a Professor of Ethics with Special Emphasis on Applied Ethics at the University of Vienna, where she also chairs the Ethics department. She has a distinguished academic career with previous positions at the University of Cologne, the University of Münster, and the University of Chicago. At the Center of Environmental Research in Münster, Kallhoff explored the theoretical foundation of plant ethics and ethical naturalism and continued research on plants in the project “New Directions of Plant Ethics”. As a Feodor-Lynen Fellow of the Humboldt Foundation Kallhoff developed an interdisciplinary theory of public goods (Why Democracy Needs Public Goods, Lexington 2011). More recently, her research focuses on climate ethics (Climate Justice and Collective Action, Routledge 2021), the ethics of war and peace and moral capacities of animals and of human beings (Der Mensch – das moralische Tier, Suhrkamp 2022). She has led numerous interdisciplinary projects and served as director of the research platform Nano-Norms-Nature. She contributes significantly to ethical discourse through her publications and teaching initiatives.

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Niko Havranek
QUALIFICATION

Habilitation, Philosophy, University of Münster, Germany

PhD, Philosophy, University of Münster (Germany)

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