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Today the measurable health burden of neurological and mental
health disorders matches or even surpasses any other cluster of
health conditions. At the same time, the clinical applications
of recent advances in neuroscience are hardly straightforward.
In Pragmatic Neuroethics, Eric Racine argues that the emerging
field of neuroethics offers a way to integrate such specialties
as neurology, psychiatry, and neurosurgery with the humanities
and social sciences, neuroscience research, and related
healthcare professions, with the goal of tackling key ethical
challenges and improving patient care. Racine provides a survey
of the often diverging perspectives within neuroethics, offers a
theoretical framework supported by empirical data, and discusses
the neuroethical implications of such issues as media coverage
of neuroscience innovation and the importance of public concerns
and lay opinion; nonmedical use of pharmaceuticals for
performance enhancement; and the discord between intuitive
notions about consciousness and behavior and the scientific
understanding of them.
Racine proposes a pragmatic neuroethics that combines
pluralistic approaches, bottom-up research perspectives, and a
focus on practical issues (in contrast to other more theoretical
and single-discipline approaches to the field). He discusses
ethical issues related to powerful neuroscienctific insights
into the mechanisms underlying moral reasoning, cooperative
behavior, and such emotional processes as empathy. In addition,
he outlines a pragmatic framework for neuroethics, based on the
philosophy of emergentism, which identifies conditions for the
meaningful contribution of neuroscience to ethics, and sketches
new directions and strategies for meeting future challenges for
neuroscience and society.
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