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El. knyga: The Ethics of Neuroscience and National Security

  • Formatas: 226 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-May-2021
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9780429824142
  • Formatas: 226 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-May-2021
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9780429824142

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New advances in neuroscience promise innovations in national security, especially in the areas of law enforcement, intelligence collection, and armed conflict. But ethical questions emerge about how we can, and should, use these innovations. This book draws on the open literature to map the development of neuroscience, particularly through funding by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, in certain areas like behavior prediction, behavior modification, and neuroenhancement, and its use in the creation of novel weapons. It shows how advances in neuroscience and new technologies raise ethical issues that challenge the norms of law enforcement, intelligence collection, and armed conflict, broadly grouped under the term "national security." Increasing technological sophistication without attention to ethics, this book argues, risks creating conditions for the development of "dual-use" technologies that may be prone to misuse, are grounded in an incomplete understanding of the brain, or are based on a limited view of the political contexts in which these technologies arise. A concluding section looks at policy and regulatory options that might promote the benefits of emerging neuroscience, while mitigating attendant risks.

Key Features:











First broad survey of the ethics of neuroscience as it applies to national security





Innovative ethical analysis over a range of cross-cutting technologies including behavior prediction and modification tools, human enhancement, and novel lethal and nonlethal weapons





Ethical analysis covering all stages from the development, testing, and use (or misuse) of these technologies; and decisions from the individual scientist to the nation state











Strong policy focus at multiple levels, from self-governance to international regulation





Combination of philosophical analysis with grounded, practical recommendations

Recenzijos

"Advances in neuroscience will raise increasing problems in relation to national security in the postCOVID-19 world. This book demonstrates just how complex these problems will be and stresses the collective role that scientists could play in dealing with them. I hope that his ethical analysis of neuroscience and national security will be widely read, particularly by neuroscientists." Malcolm Dando, University of Bradford, U.K.

1.Introduction Part I: Brains in Battle
2. Predicting the Future
3. The
Science of Persuasion
4. Building a Better Warfighter
5. Neuroweapons Part
II: Neuroethics and National Security
6. Whither Neuroethics?
7. Translation
8. Dual-Use
9. Corruption
10. Neurosupremacy Part III: Policy
11.
Self-Regulation
12. Organizations
13. Nations
14. Global Governance
15.
Restructuring Science
Nicholas G. Evans is Assistant Professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell. He is the co-editor of Ebolas Message: Public Health and Medicine in the Twenty-First Century (2016).