Neuroethics and the Scientific Revision of Common Sense

Nada Gligorov

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Springer Netherlands img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Sonstiges

Beschreibung

This book is focused on the examination of the particular relationship between developments in neuroscience and commonsense concepts, such as free will, personal identity, privacy, etc., which feature prominently in moral discourse.  In the book common sense is recast as an ever-shifting repository of theories from many domains, including science. Utilizing this alternative characterization of common sense, the book reexamines the impact of neuroscience on commonsense moral conceptions.

Neuroethics is one of the newest, developing branches of Bioethics. Topics often raised include issues of free will, personal identity and the self; the possible ethical implication of memory manipulation; brain imaging and mind-reading; brain stimulation/enhancement and its impacts on personal identity; and brain death.

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Schlagwörter

Philosophy of Mind, Neuroscience mind reading, Neuroscience free will, Neuroscience brain imaging, Bioethics personal identity, Neuroethics, Neuroscience moral conceptions, Brain enhancement personal identity, Neuroscience privacy, Neuroscience Free will, Neuroscience the self, Neuroscience psychology, Brain stimulation personal identity, Brain death the self, Neuroscience common sense, Neuroscience personal identity, Personal identity the self, Neuroscience