Prof. Dr. Nadia Mazouz
Prof. Dr. Nadia Mazouz
Full Professor at the Department of Humanities, Social and Political Sciences
Additional information
Research area
My research interests focus on fundamental questions of practical philosophy as well as on applied problems of morality. I pursue the project of formulating Kantian consent theories of morality in such a way that they can be applied to controversial cultural, social and political questions. The deliberative variant of a consent-theory that I am pursuing renounces substantial theoretical presuppositions. Thus, the deliberative approach can integrate the pluralism of theories in moral philosophy and be understood as an expression of alternative propositions about what is to be accepted as justification. Related to this is also an innovative approach to questions of applied ethics that reckons with persistent dissent in society and politics rather than arguing it away.
In order to elaborate such a deliberative approach, on the one hand the methodological foundations of the theory have to be developed further and on the other hand it has to be applied to different relevant fields of practice. On the methodological level, problems of spelling out and justifying morality arise in particular, such as the question of how to reconstruct what is to be accepted as justification in which context (science, politics, lifeworld, etc.), within the framework of a theory of reasons and its interlocking with a theory of rhetoric; the problem of whether numbers count in morality and, if so, how; the role of solitary as well as communal reflection in a theory of the good life; the status of beings who are incapable (including future generations) or of persons who are unwilling to deliberate (in hostile interpersonal and international relations).
The relevant fields of practice are diverse: environmental ethics and scientific ethics, animal ethics, medical ethics and bioethics, but also the genuinely political practices within and between political communities. In terms of normative issues of interpolis politics, relevant topics include: global justice; morality of war, especially new forms of war; democracy and human rights; international relations and international law.
My research profile thus combines long-term work on the elaboration of a deliberative theory and its applications with more short term projects in which specific theoretical problems are focused and individual fields of application are worked through.
Specifically, I am currently working on: the trolley problem; the numbers problem; how to allocate scarce medical resources; the morality of war, specifically new war technologies; the conceptual and normative analysis of recommender systems and (self-)deception; the normative analysis of the crisis of liberalism and cosmopolitanism; climate justice and the challenge of pluralism; the ethics of artificial intelligence in times of polarization; the consent theory of morality and its application in democracies in crisis.
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- Studies in physics at the Technical University of Berlin and philosophy at the Technical, Free and Humboldt Universities of Berlin and Leipzig University.
- 1999 Doctorate (Dr. rer. nat.) at the Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society and at the Free University of Berlin, with a thesis on model building and simulations of self-organized electrochemical systems: Fronts, Waves, and Stationary Structures in Electrochemical Systems.
- 2003 Doctorate (Dr. phil.) at the Institute of Philosophy of the University of Stuttgart. Topic of the dissertation: Aspects of a deliberative theory of justice and the good.
- Research assistant at the Universities of Stuttgart, Tübingen and Dortmund as well as at the ETH Zurich. Participation in third-party funded projects on global change, on the concept of illness and the distribution of resources in health care, and on the phenomenology of the use of resources.
- Several research visits at the School of Philosophy of the Australian National University in Canberra.
- 2016 Habilitation in Philosophy at the Department of Humanities, Social and Political Sciences at ETH Zurich. Topic of the habilitation thesis: Morality of War and Peace.
- 2017-2021 University professor of practical philosophy in Marburg.
- Since 2022 University Professor for Practical Philosophy at ETH Zurich.
Course Catalogue
Autumn Semester 2024
Number | Unit |
---|---|
851-0038-00L | Philosophical Ethics of Life and Death |
851-0040-00L | Can it Be Permissible to Kill a Few in Order to Save Many? |
851-0622-00L | Inequality and Injustice: Economic and Philosophical Perspectives |
862-0004-19L | Research Colloquium Philosophy for Master Students and PhD (HS 2024) |