Foreword Neil Levy Introduction James J. Giordano 1. Developments in neuroscience: where have we been, where are we going? D. F. Swaab 2. Origins of the modern concept of neuroscience: Wilhelm Wundt, empiricism, and idealism - implications for contemporary neuroethics Niko Kohls and Roland Benedikter 3. On the cusp: the hard problem of neuroscience and its practical implications Ralph D. Ellis 4. The mind-body issue Dieter Birnbacher 5. Personal identity and the nature of the self Paolo Costa 6. Religious issues and the question of moral autonomy Antonio Autiero and Lucia Galvagni 7. Toward a cognitive neurobiology of the moral virtues Paul M. Churchland 8. From a neurophilosophy of pain, to a neuroethics of pain care James J. Giordano 9. Transplantation and xenotransplantation: ethics of cell therapy in the brain revisited Gerard J. Boer 10. Neurogenetics and ethics: how scientific frameworks can better inform ethics Kevin FitzGerald and Rachel Wurzman 11. Neuroimaging: thinking in pictures John VanMeter 12. Can we read minds? Ethical challenges and responsibilities in the use of neuroimaging research Eric Racine, Emily Bell and Judy Illes 13. Possibilities, limits, and implications of brain-computer interfacing technologies Thilo Hinterberger 14. Neural engineering: the ethical challenges ahead Bert Gordijn and Alena M. Buyx 15. Neurotechnology as a public good: probity, policy, and how to get there from here Alexis M. Jeannotte, Kathryn N. Schiller, Leah M. Reeves, Evan G. DeRenzo and Dennis K. McBride 16. Globalization - pluralist concerns and contexts: shaping international policy in neuroethics Robert H. Blank 17. The human condition and strivings to flourish: treatments, enhancements, science and society Adriana Gini and James J. Giordano 18. The limits of neurotalk Matthew B. Crawford Afterword Walter Glannon Index.
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