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MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK
Main description:
This book offers a comprehensive analysis of philosophical, social, ethical, and legal challenges arising as a consequences of current advances in neurosciences and neurotechnology. It starts by offering an overview of fundamental concepts such as mental privacy, personal autonomy, mental integrity, and responsibility, among others. In turn, it discusses the influence of possible misuses or uncontrolled uses of neurotechnology on those concepts, and, more in general, on human rights and equality. Then, it makes some original proposals to deal with the main ethical, legal, and social problems associated to the use of neurotechnology, both in medicine and in everyday life, suggesting possible policies to protect privacy, neural data, and intimacy. Crossing the borders between humanities, natural sciences, bio-medicine, and engineering, and taking into account geographical and cultural differences, this book offers a conceptual debate around policy and decision making concerning some of the key neuroethical challenges of our times. It offers a comprehensive guide to the most important issues of neurojustice and neuroprotection, together with a set of new paradigms to face some of the most urgent neuroethical problems of our times.
Contents:
Introduction. Towards an ethical discussion of neurotechnological progress.- The Concept of Mind in the Neuroprotection Debate.- The Unitary Sense of Human Being. A Husserlian approach against reductionism.- Ethics and Neuroscience: Protecting consciousness.- Free Will and Autonomy in the Age of Neurotechnologies.
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: Springer (Springer Nature Switzerland AG)
Publication date: March, 2023
Pages: 177
Weight: 296g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: Biomedical Engineering