Tzofit Ofengenden, PhD

Associate Director of Graduate Studies

Assistant Professor
 
School or College 
School of Medicine
 
Department/Program
Family Community Medicine, Faculty
Bioethics, Associate Director of Graduate Studies, Leadership
The Program in Medical Ethics and Human Values

Biography

Tzofit earned her PhD in Philosophy from Tübingen University,  Germany, in 2014. Her philosophical interests lie in neuroethics, bioethics and neurophilosophy. Tzofit is especially interested in the new findings in neuroscience that enable brain interventions and the ethical implications that arise from these new possibilities. She is also interested in the way neuroscience reformulates and reshapes central philosophical concepts such as memory, imagination, and consciousness. In her current research,  she examines whether neurobiological paradigms of memory formation (such as multiple trace theory and reconsolidation theory) destabilize the notion of memory as a source of factual truth, raise questions regarding our illusion of constant memories and persistent sense of self and thus change our self-perception and the notion of personal identity.

Areas of Expertise

Ethics
Neuroethics
Bioethics
Medical Ethics
Neurophilosophy
Philosophy of Mind

Publications

“Rethinking Memory and Imagination: A Philosophical and Neuroscientific Perspective.” RHV: An International Journal of Philosophy. December 26, 2025. https://revistas.uv.cl/index.php/RHV/article/view/4790/4956 

“Are Conscientious Refusal and Conscientious Provision Mutually Exclusive?” Bioethics. November 18, 2025. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41252567/ 

“Memory Formation and Belief.” Dialogues in Philosophy, Mental and Neuro Sciences. Volume 7, Issue 2. 2014.  https://philarchive.org/archive/OFEMFA 
“Neurobiological Paradigm of Memory Formation and its Theoretical and Ethical Implications.” The American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience. 2014.