Charles Foster (born 1962) is an English writer, traveller, veterinarian, taxidermist, barrister and philosopher. He is known for his books and articles on Natural History, travel (particularly in Africa and the Middle East), theology, law and medical ethics. He is a Fellow of Exeter College, Oxford. He says of his own books: 'Ultimately they are all presumptuous and unsuccessful attempts to answer the questions 'who or what are we?', and 'what on earth are we doing here?'[1]

Charles Foster (2019)

Education edit

He was educated at Shrewsbury School and St John's College, Cambridge, where he read Veterinary Medicine and Law. He holds a PhD in medical law and ethics from the University of Cambridge. He is a qualified veterinary surgeon. He was called to the Bar by the Inner Temple.

Career edit

After Cambridge he worked on the comparative anatomy of the Himalayan Hispid hare and chemotaxis in leeches, worked in Saudi Arabia studying the immobilisation of Goitred and Mountain gazelles, did pupillage at the English Bar, and was a research fellow at the Hebrew University, Jerusalem. He was a research assistant to Aharon Barak, Justice (and later President) of the Supreme Court of Israel. He practises at the Bar in London, primarily in medical law, and has been involved in some of the most significant cases of recent years. He was called to the Bar of the Republic of Ireland in 1996. He teaches Medical Law and Ethics at the University of Oxford and was a Visiting Fellow of Green College, Oxford. In 2009 he was elected a Fellow of Green Templeton College, Oxford. He left the college in 2022, when he was elected a Fellow of Exeter College, Oxford.

Recent expeditions have included the Danakil Depression in Ethiopia, studying water metabolism in mules; ecological surveys in the Quirimbas Archipelago, northern Mozambique, and a successful ski expedition to the North Pole. He is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and the Linnean Society.

In the fields of law and philosophy he is probably best known for his criticisms of the hegemony of autonomy in medical ethics (in 'Choosing Life, Choosing Death' (2009)), and for his contention that the 'Four Principles' approach of Tom Beauchamp and James Childress is redundant, and should be replaced by an analysis based on a broadly Aristotelean account of human dignity ('Human Dignity in Bioethics and Law' (2011)).

Many of his writings on religion have been attacked as heretical by conservative Christians, particularly in the US.[2]

As part of his philosophical investigations relating to authenticity and identity, he has tried living as a badger, an otter, an urban fox, a red deer and a swift,[3][4] and he has written about this in his book Being a Beast in 2016. For living in the wild as, at different times, a badger, an otter, a deer, a fox, and a bird, he won an Ig Nobel prize in Biology.[5]

Bibliography edit

In addition to a large number of articles, there are the following books and book chapters:[6][7]

  • Tripping and Slipping Cases: A Practitioner's Guide: Longman/FT Law and Tax/Sweet and Maxwell, 1st Ed. 1994: 2nd Ed. 1996: 3rd Ed. 2002, 4th Ed. 2005
  • Disclosure and Confidentiality: FT Law and Tax, 1996 (with T. Wynn and N. Ainley)
  • Personal Injury Toolkit: FT Law and Tax/ Sweet and Maxwell, 1st Ed.1997, 2nd Ed. 1998, 3rd Ed. 1999, 4th Ed. 2001, 5th Ed. 2002, 6th Ed. 2003 (Electronic and paper publication, with G. Reeds and M. Bennet).
  • Clinical confidentiality: Monitor Press, 2000 (with Nick Peacock)
  • Desert Travellers: from Herodotus to T.E. Lawrence: Ed. Starkey and El Daly; ASTENE Publications, 2000: Chapter on: “The Zoology of Herodotus and his Greek descendants.”
  • Civil Advocacy: Cavendish (with Charles Bourne, Jacqui Gilliatt and Prashant Popat): 2nd Ed. 2001
  • Healthcare Law: The impact of the Human Rights Act 1998 (Ed. Garwood-Gowers, Tingle and Lewis): Cavendish, 2001: Chapter on “Access, Procedure and the Human Rights Act 1998 in Medical Cases”.
  • Drafting: Cavendish, 2nd Ed. 2001 (with Elmer Doonan)
  • Twenty-First Century Nursing: Law and Ethics: TVF Medical Communications/Pharmacia (CD Rom)
  • Clinical Guidelines: Law, policy and practice: Cavendish, 2002 (joint editor with John Tingle and chapter on “Civil procedure, trial issues and clinical guidelines).
  • Nursing Law and Ethics: Blackwell Scientific. 2nd Ed., 2002. Ed. Tingle and Cribb. Chapter on: Negligence: The legal perspective.
  • The literature of travel and exploration: Fitzroy Dearborn, 2003 (contributor): Edited by Jennifer Speake. Essays on Cairo, Damascus, the Gobi desert, the Mekong River, travellers of the ancient Greek world, western travellers to Central Asia, Ranulph Fiennes, Fitzroy Maclean.
  • Freedom Fighters: Authentic Press, 2005. Ed. Rob Frost: Chapter on 'Law, Freedom and Christian Principle in England'
  • Travellers in the Near East: Stacey International (Editor), 2004
  • Sahara Overland: Trailblazer publications, 2004. Ed. Chris Scott: Section on travel with camels, 2004
  • Regulating Health Care Quality: Legal and Professional Issues: Butterworth Heinemann/Elsevier Science (Editor, with John Tingle and Kay Wheat), and chapter on 'Disciplinary jurisdiction over the medical and other healthcare professions': 2004
  • Elements of Medical Law, 2005, Barry Rose, 2nd Ed. 2007, Claerhout Publishing
  • Personal Injury, 2006, Jordans (contributor)
  • The Jesus Inquest, 2006: Lion Hudson
  • Medical Mistakes, 2007: Claerhout Publishing
  • The Christmas Mystery, 2007: Authentic Books
  • Tracking the Ark of the Covenant, 2007: Lion Hudson
  • Veterinary Negligence: in Professional Negligence and Liability, Informa, 2008
  • Choosing Life, Choosing Death: The tyranny of autonomy in medical ethics and law, 2009: Hart
  • The misadventures of Mr. Badshot, 2010, Quiller (with James St Clair Wade)
  • Medical Law Precedents, 2010, Wildys
  • The Selfless Gene: Living with God and Darwin, 2009 (Hodder) and 2010 (Thomas Nelson)
  • The Sacred Journey, 2010, Thomas Nelson
  • Wired for God? The Biology of religious experience, 2010, Hodder
  • 'Challenging the Inquiry', in Public Inquiries, 2011, OUP
  • Human dignity in bioethics and law, 2011, Hart
  • In the hot unconscious: An Indian Journey, 2012, Tranquebar
  • Medical Law: A Very Short Introduction, 2013, Oxford University Press
  • Dementia: Law and Ethics, 2014, Hart (editor, with Jonathan Herring and Israel Doron)
  • Altruism, Welfare and the Law, 2015, Springer (with Jonathan Herring)
  • Being a Beast, 2016, Profile Books
  • The Screaming Sky, 2020, shortlisted for Wainwright Prize
  • Being a Human: Adventures in Forty Thousand Years of Consciousness, 2021, Profile Books

References edit

  1. ^ "Home". charlesfoster.co.uk.
  2. ^ e.g. http://5ptsalt.com/2010/01/18/book-review-the-selfless-gene-living-with-god-darwin/
  3. ^ "Being a Beast: Charles Foster tries life as an animal". Oxford Today. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  4. ^ "Going underground: meet the man who lived as an animal". The Guardian. 23 January 2016. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  5. ^ "Improbable Research". Archived from the original on 20 July 2018. Retrieved 6 August 2019.
  6. ^ "Biography, Charles Foster Research Associate, the Ethox Centre, Nuffield Department of Population Health". University of Oxford, Faculty of Law. 16 July 2015. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  7. ^ Foster, Charles. "All books & publications". Charles Foster, Author, Barrister, Traveller. Retrieved 19 February 2016.

External links edit