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"Cosmetic Neurology" and the Problem of Pain

"Cosmetic Neurology" and the Problem of Pain

Published Jul 30, 2007
by Anjan Chatterjee, M.D.
Is taking a drug to lessen the pain of our common daily struggles a “cosmetic” enhancement of human life, even a danger to character, or is it an ethical choice?

“The Great Cerebroscope Controversy”

Published Apr 01, 2000
by Richard Restak
Now that scientists can almost predict human behavior by examining the brain... “Wait!” cries Restak, neurologist and best-selling author on brain research. Brain scientists, for all the power and promise of their field, are rank newcomers to questions of human choice, motivation, and responsibility. He offers a cautionary parable, set in the year 2010, of hubris and humility.

“The Very First Foundation of Virtue”: Neurobiology and Ethical Behaviors

Published Jan 01, 2003
by Antonio Damasio
“The construction we call ethics in humans may have begun as part of an overall program of bioregulation,” writes Antonio Damasio in Looking for Spinoza: Joy, Sorrow, and the Feeling Brain. From the outset, Damasio has espoused a new perspective on human emotions as essential partners of reason in thinking about our values and choices and in the construction of consciousness itself. In this excerpt, he places emotions (and their mental counterpart, feelings) within the continuum of bioregulation, examining how feelings bring under cognitive control the information required for human survival, flourishing, and creation of political and social bonds. The foundation of ethical behavior, he writes “is the result of a discovery based on the observation of human nature rather than the revelation of a prophet.”

A Brain Built for Fair Play

Published Mar 01, 2006
by Donald W. Pfaff
As scientists and society as a whole are facing the ethical questions inherent in brain science, researchers are beginning to explore the biological nature of ethical behavior. Rockefeller University neuroscientist Donald W. Pfaff, Ph.D., proposes that neural and molecular processes we are beginning to understand shed light on ways the mechanism of fear helps us to treat others as we would like to be treated.

A Fish Story? Brain Maps, Lie Detection, and Personhood

Published Oct 01, 2004
by Judy Illes
Wouldn’t it be nice if a machine could tell us when someone is not telling the truth and whether the transgression is just a minor deception or a dangerous lie? Despite progress in technologies such as “brain fingerprinting” and functional magnetic resonance imaging, neuroscientific lie detection is still a long way from commercial reality. For such a capability to be more than a sophisticated form of polygraphy, we must carefully work out our scientific concepts about deception and develop a better understanding of how minds work.

A Primer on Neuroscience and Public Policy

Published Apr 01, 1999
by Robert Cook-Deegan

A Revolution in Brain Literacy

Published Oct 01, 2001
by Norbert R. Myslinski
No doubt about it. By the end of the Decade of the Brain, Americans had new insights, attitudes, and expectations about the brain. How did we achieve a near revolution in brain literacy—and will it prepare us to cope with the tough questions that brain research is raising? Stem cells? Selecting genes for our children? Turning addiction on and off at will? Public debate, informed by facts and understanding, will be essential, says the author.

Anticipating “Smart” Drugs

Published Jan 01, 2006
by Hakon Heimer

Beyond Therapy: Biotechnology and the Pursuit of Happiness

Published Oct 01, 2004
by The President’s Council on Bioethics
In a chapter titled “Ageless Bodies,” the President’s council’s report considered the progress in research aimed at mitigating the normal changes and preventing the diseases associated with aging. This excerpt focuses on the research findings regarding the possibilities of retarding aging itself and the ethical implications for individuals and society of greatly increased longevity.
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Featuring news and analysis on the implications of brain science 

Annual Meeting of the Neuroethics Society held Nov. 13-14, 2008

The conference, held in Washington, D.C., included lectures, forums, debates, poster sessions and other events on topics including the science of decision-making and free will, national intelligence and neuroscience and the ethics of  forensic neuroscience,  cognitive enhancement and treatments for psychiatric disorders. 
Dana Press blogs at the meeting
Podcast interviews with some of the featured speakers will be available soon on the Society's site.
From Dana Press: Try to Remember

From Dana Press: Try to Remember

One of our country’s leading authorities on psychiatry tells the unforgettable story of how lives can be destroyed by faddish misdirections of thought and therapeutic practices. His first-hand account begins in the 1990s with his battle against the theory of “repressed sexual memories” and ends with his concern that excessive diagnosis of post traumatic stress disorder is today placing many patients in treatments that leave their real mental troubles untouched. A passionate advocate for the contribution of psychotherapy to healing, McHugh reaches out to patients, families and mental health providers to explain how to work together toward effective diagnosis and treatment to win a contest for mental peace.

Webcasts and Podcasts

Webcasts:

Mind Wars: A trans-Atlantic discussion on how brain research may change the way wars are fought (9/26/2007, Dana Centre in London and Dana Center in Washington, DC)

The Neuroethics of Enhancement (5/14/2007, Dana Center in Washington, DC) 

Neuroethics: The Ethics of Brain Research (6/23/2005, Dana Centre in London)

Science, Ethics, and the Law (5/10/2005, Dana Centre in Washington, DC)

Podcasts:

Neuroethics (12/01/2003, 58 min)

 

Defining Right and Wrong in Brain Science

Defining Right and Wrong in Brain Science

The fifth volume in The Dana Foundation Series on Neuroethics, this collection marks the five-year anniversary of the first meeting in the field of neuroethics, providing readers with the seminal writings on past, present, and future ethical issues facing neuroscience and society.