Prof. Dr. Kevin Esvelt
Director of the Sculpting Evolution group
Assistant Professor, MIT Media Lab
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Antonio D´Isanto
PhD student in Astroinformatics
HITS – Heidelberg Institute for Theoretical Studies
Dr. Dorothea Kaufmann
Study Program Manager for Molecular Biotechnology
Institute of Pharmacy and Molecular Biotechnology
University of Heidelberg
Thomas Wollmann
PhD Student and Co-Founder of PW solutions
Department Bioinformatics & Functional Genomics
Heidelberg University
Prof. Dr. Michael Wink
Academic Dean of the Institute for Pharmacy and Molecular Biotechnology
Heidelberg University
Prof. Dr. Dr. Edith Huland
Founder & Managing Director of Immunservice GmbH
Medical Professional
Prof. Dr. Philipp Stoellger
Theological Department
Heidelberg University
PD Dr. Ullrich Köthe
Visual Learning Lab
Heidelberg Collaboratory for Image Processing and
Dr. Michael Ernst
Director of the Agricultural Department
University of Hohenheim
Dr. Lorenz Adlung
PhD in Systems Biology
Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel
Birgit Degner
Judge
Ordinary Jurisdiction North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
From their point of view, science should be as unrestricted as possible, but by doing this, the scientist is assigned a crucial role: Each scientist needs to think if his research is compatible with their own moral values and make sure that all necessary safety measures and precautions are taken. The scientist is connected to and responsible for the research done, but in the end the consumers can and should use their market power to see if the findings are compatible with general ethical values. Ethical commissions can lead discussions, clarify research topics and help finding moral values.
They concluded that science should not be limited unnecessarily, because the ultimate goal is the improvement of the general quality of life for every human.
Dr. Ingo Janausch
Representative Biological Security and Gene Technology
Department for Biological Safety
Heidelberg University
Dr. Jens Degner
Judge
Ordinary Jurisdiction North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
From their point of view, science should be as unrestricted as possible, but by doing this, the scientist is assigned a crucial role: Each scientist needs to think if his research is compatible with their own moral values and make sure that all necessary safety measures and precautions are taken. The scientist is connected to and responsible for the research done, but in the end the consumers can and should use their market power to see if the findings are compatible with general ethical values. Ethical commissions can lead discussions, clarify research topics and help finding moral values.
They concluded that science should not be limited unnecessarily, because the ultimate goal is the improvement of the general quality of life for every human.
Prof. Dr. Erika Musterfrau
Head of Department Musterpatterns
Pattern Scientist