My brain made me not do it: an emergentist interpretation of Benjamin Libet
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Título
My brain made me not do it: an emergentist interpretation of Benjamin LibetAutoría
Fecha de publicación
2016Editor
Universitat Ramon Llull; Medknow PublicationsISSN
2013-8393Cita bibliográfica
Pallarés Domínguez, Daniel Vicente. My brain made me not do it: an emergentist interpretation of Benjamin Libet. RAMON LLULL JOURNAL OF APPLIED ETHICS. Num. 07. pp. 121-141Tipo de documento
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Resumen
Since it became a discipline in 2002 (Safire, 2002), neuroethics has
been characterised in two ways: “ethics of neuroscience” or “neuroscience
of ethics” (Roskies, 2002: 21-22; Cortina, 2010: 131-133; 2011: 44). ... [+]
Since it became a discipline in 2002 (Safire, 2002), neuroethics has
been characterised in two ways: “ethics of neuroscience” or “neuroscience
of ethics” (Roskies, 2002: 21-22; Cortina, 2010: 131-133; 2011: 44). The
former refers to the nature of the ethics applied to review the ethical
practices that imply clinically treating the human brain. The latter ‒neuroscience
of ethics‒ implies research into more transcendental philosophical
notions of the human being ‒free will, personal identity, intention
and control, emotion and reason relations‒ but from the brain
functions viewpoint. [-]
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RAMON LLULL JOURNAL OF APPLIED ETHICS. Num. 07. 2016Derechos de acceso
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/
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