Robert J. Rutland Institute for Ethics
Rutland Institute Fellows...

Teddi Fishman

Dr. Teddi Fishman

Rutland Institute Fellow

Director, Center for Academic Integrity

Teddi Fishman serves as Director of the Center for Academic Integrity, a center housed within the Rutland Institute for Ethics. She earned M. A. degrees in both Professional Communication and English from Clemson University in 1995 and 1996 respectively before completing a Ph.D. Rhetoric and Composition at Purdue University in 2002. Teddi’s research is interdisciplinary and addresses such diverse topics as the rhetoric of police writing, identity in online environments, and the teaching of multi-media literacy. She has taught a similarly varied range of courses including Classical Rhetoric, Science, Technology, and Society, and Digital Publishing. Her research has been published in a number of edited collections as well as in online and print journals including Kairos and The Journal of Managerial Accounting. One of the core beliefs that unites her eclectic and seemingly disparate collection of professional endeavors and achievements is the belief that personal and systemic integrity in education, communication, and media are essential for the maintenance of a successful, sustainable, and just society. 

 

 

Stephen Satris

Dr. Stephen Satris

C. Calhoun Lemon Fellow

Stephen Satris is associate professor of philosophy. Satris joined Clemson in 1986. He did his graduate work in philosophy at the University of Hawaii (M.A., 1971) and Cambridge University, Cambridge, England (Ph.D., 1984). He designed and teaches a course at Clemson on ethics in architecture. He teaches Introduction to Ethics, Moral Philosophy, and Ancient Philosophy on a regular basis.. His books include Ethical Emotivism (Nijhoff, 1987) and Taking Sides: Clashing Views on Controversial Moral Issues, 9th edition (Dushkin/McGraw-Hill, 2004) -- a text widely used at colleges and universities throughout the United States. His work has appeared in numerous journals including the Journal of the History of Ideas, Teaching Philosophy, Ethics, Critical Reviews in Biomedical Engineering, Choice, Philosophy Today and the Journal of Value Inquiry.

 

Kelly C. Smith

Dr. Kelly C. Smith

C. Calhoun Lemon Fellow

Kelly C. Smith is associate professor of philosophy. He received his M.S. in zoology (genetics) from Duke University in 1992, followed by his Ph.D. in philosophy, also from Duke, in 1994. Since then he has pursued research on a number of interdisciplinary topics including the concept of disease in medicine, the relationship between religious faith and scientific reasoning, ethical issues surrounding the search for life on other planets, and the ethical implications of new genetic technologies. His work has been published in numerous professional journals including The Mount Sinai Journal of Medicine, Biology and Philosophy, Philosophy of Science and The Journal of the American Medical Association. He has taught a variety of courses ranging from Business Ethics to Evolution to Statistics. He is committed to the idea that the humanities and the sciences have something interesting to say to each other.

 

 

Charles Starkey

Dr. Charles Starkey

Rutland Institute Fellow

 

Charles Starkey joined the Department in 2003, having previously taught at Washington University in St. Louis and Iowa State University.  He received his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin, Madison in 2001.  His primary research interests are in value theory and moral psychology, and his current research examines the nature of moral experience and its relation to perception and cognition. Such research includes the relevance of emotion to moral agency and moral character.  In addressing these issues, draws upon of traditional ethical theory, the philosophy of mind, and empirical psychological research.  His ancillary interests include the history of philosophy, ethical issues arising from technologies, and the nature and value of autonomy -- particularly the role it plays in professional ethics and current ethical issues.  Recent presentations at national conferences include "On the Scope of Moral Perception" and "Emotion and the Persistence of Character Traits."

 

Julia Frugoli

Dr. Julia Frugoli

Special Projects Fellow, Research Ethics

Julia A. Frugoli is an assistant professor in the department of Genetics, Biochemistry and Life Science Studies.  She received her PhD in Biological Sciences from Dartmouth College, followed by postdoctoral research in the Department of Plant Pathology and Microbiology at Texas A&M University.  She came to Clemson in 2000.  Along the way, she developed an interest in research ethics through an NSF-funded program called the Graduate Research Ethics Education Workshop.  While pursuing research on the molecular genetic basis of a symbiotic interaction between bacteria and plants and teaching an undergraduate Genetics course, she has also participated in Research Ethics Workshops and Rutland Center panel discussions.  Her publications range from articles in Plant Cell, Plant Physiology, Genome, and Genetics to Science and Engineering Ethics.