Tom Beauchamp | |
|---|---|
| Born | Tom Lamar Beauchamp III (1939-12-02)December 2, 1939 |
| Died | February 19, 2025(2025-02-19) (aged 85) |
| Education | BA, MA (1963) Southern Methodist University BD (1966) Yale Divinity School PhD (1970, in philosophy) Johns Hopkins University |
| Occupation | Philosopher |
| Employer | Georgetown University |
| Website | Homepage Georgetown University Homepage Kennedy Institute of Ethics |
Tom Lamar Beauchamp III (December 2, 1939 – February 19, 2025) was an American philosopher. He specialized in the work ofDavid Hume,moral philosophy,bioethics, andanimal ethics. Beauchamp was ProfessorEmeritus of Philosophy atGeorgetown University,[1] where he was Senior Research Scholar at theKennedy Institute of Ethics.[2]
Beauchamp authored or co-authored several books on ethics and on Hume, includingHume and the Problem of Causation (1981, withAlexander Rosenberg),Principles of Biomedical Ethics (1985, withJames F. Childress), andThe Human Use of Animals (1998, with F. Barbara Orlanset al). He was the co-editor with R. G. Frey ofThe Oxford Handbook of Animal Ethics (2011). He was also the co-editor of the complete works of Hume,The Critical Edition of the Works of David Hume (1999), published by Oxford University Press.[1]
Beauchamp earned a BA fromSouthern Methodist University in 1963, a BD fromYale Divinity School, and PhD in philosophy fromJohns Hopkins University in 1970. He was a fellow of theHastings Center.[1]
Beauchamp worked on the staff of the National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research, where he co-wrote theBelmont Report in 1978. He subsequently joined with James Childress to writePrinciples of Biomedical Ethics (1979), the first major American bioethics textbook.[3] Beauchamp was also an expert on the philosophy of David Hume. He was the coeditor of the complete works of Hume published by Oxford University Press, and together with Alexander Rosenberg was the author ofHume and the Problem of Causation (1981), in which Hume's regularity theory ofcausation is defended, along with a nonskeptical interpretation of Hume's arguments against induction.
He also wrote extensively aboutanimal rights, and defended a theory of animal rights which would significantly alter, though would not end, the ways in which non-human animals are currently used.[4]
Beauchamp retired in 2016.[5] A ceremony celebrating his career featured tributes from Maggie Little, Bill Blattner,Jeffrey Kahn,James Childress,Alexander Rosenberg,Patricia King,David DeGrazia, Wayne Davis,Jack DeGioia, and his children.[6]
Arthur Caplan, a professor of bioethics at the New York University Grossman School of Medicine, called Beauchamp "a key figure in the foundation of the entire field of bioethics.”[7]
Beauchamp died on February 19, 2025, at the age of 85. He was buried at Abel's Hill Cemetery, inChilmark, Massachusetts, on February 24.[8]
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