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- Neuroethics abstract "Neuroethics refers to two related fields of study: What the philosopher Adina Roskies has called the ethics of neuroscience and the neuroscience of ethics. The ethics of neuroscience comprises the bulk of work in neuroethics. It concerns the ethical, legal and social impact of neuroscience, including the ways in which neurotechnology can be used to predict or alter human behavior and "the implications of our mechanistic understanding of brain function for society... integrating neuroscientific knowledge with ethical and social thought".Some neuroethics problems are not fundamentally different from those encountered in bioethics. Others are unique to neuroethics because the brain, as the organ of the mind, has implications for broader philosophical problems, such as the nature of free will, moral responsibility, self-deception, and personal identity. Examples of neuroethics topics are given later in this article ("Key issues in neuroethics").The origin of the term "neuroethics" has occupied some writers. Rees and Rose (as cited in "References" on page 9) claim neuroethics is a neologism that emerged only at the beginning of the 21st century, largely through the oral and written communications of ethicists and philosophers. According to Racine (2010), the term was coined by the Harvard physician Anneliese A. Pontius in 1973 in a paper entitled "Neuro-ethics of 'walking' in the newborn" for the Perceptual and Motor Skills. The author reproposed the term in 1993 in her paper for Psychological Report, often wrongly mentioned as the first title containing the word "neuroethics". Before 1993, the American neurologist Ronald Cranford has used the term (see Cranford 1989). Illes (2003) records uses, from the scientific literature, from 1989 and 1991. Writer William Safire is widely credited with giving the word its current meaning in 2002, defining it as "the examination of what is right and wrong, good and bad about the treatment of, perfection of, or unwelcome invasion of and worrisome manipulation of the human brain."".
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink bioethics.od.nih.gov.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink brainethics.wordpress.com.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink ccn.upenn.edu.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink neuroethics.html.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink neurok.html.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink kolber.typepad.com.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink neurobioethics.wordpress.com.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink research.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink neuroethics.stanford.edu.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink neuroethics.upenn.edu.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink neuroethics_pubs.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink rdng1-0408.html.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink www.ajobneuroscience.com.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink www.asbh.org.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink www.bioethics.gov.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink journal.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink neuroethics.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink www.ccnelsi.com.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink www.cogneurosociety.org.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink displaystory.cfm?story_id=1143317.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink nw.cgi?NeuroPolitics.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink index.aspx?PFLG=1033.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink en.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink nn1102-1123.html.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink www.nelsi3.com.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink www.neuroethics.ox.ac.uk.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink www.neuroethics.ubc.ca.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink www.neuroethicssociety.org.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink index.php?id=2&L=1.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink www.neuroscienceandsociety.org.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink cns.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink 12152.
- Neuroethics wikiPageExternalLink www.theneuroethicsblog.com.
- Neuroethics wikiPageID "703002".
- Neuroethics wikiPageRevisionID "601568698".
- Neuroethics hasPhotoCollection Neuroethics.
- Neuroethics subject Category:Bioethics.
- Neuroethics subject Category:Ethics_of_science_and_technology.
- Neuroethics subject Category:Neuroscience.
- Neuroethics comment "Neuroethics refers to two related fields of study: What the philosopher Adina Roskies has called the ethics of neuroscience and the neuroscience of ethics. The ethics of neuroscience comprises the bulk of work in neuroethics. It concerns the ethical, legal and social impact of neuroscience, including the ways in which neurotechnology can be used to predict or alter human behavior and "the implications of our mechanistic understanding of brain function for society...".
- Neuroethics label "Neuroethics".
- Neuroethics label "Neuroethik".
- Neuroethics label "Neuroetica".
- Neuroethics label "Neuroéthique".
- Neuroethics label "Neuroética".
- Neuroethics label "脳神経倫理".
- Neuroethics sameAs Neuroetika.
- Neuroethics sameAs Neuroethik.
- Neuroethics sameAs Νευροηθική.
- Neuroethics sameAs Neuroética.
- Neuroethics sameAs Neuroéthique.
- Neuroethics sameAs Neuroetica.
- Neuroethics sameAs 脳神経倫理.
- Neuroethics sameAs m.0342cp.
- Neuroethics sameAs Q186272.
- Neuroethics sameAs Q186272.
- Neuroethics wasDerivedFrom Neuroethics?oldid=601568698.
- Neuroethics isPrimaryTopicOf Neuroethics.