- On the Possibility and Probability of Post-Persons: Neuroenhancements and Moral Status
- Human Brain Organoids and the Mereological Fallacy
- ‘More or Less Conscious’: Consciousness To-Day and To-Morrow
- Anti-Love Biomedical Intervention and the Necessity of Consent
- Implementing Neurorights: Legal and Regulatory Considerations
- One-Factor versus Two-Factor Theory of Delusion: Replies to Sullivan-Bissett and Noordhof
- The Unity of Consciousness and the Practical Ethics of Neural Organoid Research
- Affect and Human Electrophysiological Research
- Is the Treatment Worse than the Disease?: Key Stakeholders’ Views about the Use of Psychiatric Electroceutical Interventions for Treatment-Resistant Depression
- Responding to existential distress at the end of life: Psychedelics and psychedelic experiences and/ as medicine
- Correction to: Who does Neuroethics Scholarship Address, and What Does it Recommend? A Content Analysis of Selected Abstracts from the International Neuroethics Society Annual Meetings
- Deep Brain Stimulation for Consciousness Disorders; Technical and Ethical Considerations
- Neurorights, Mental Privacy, and Mind Reading
- A Transformative Trip? Experiences of Psychedelic Use
- The Reliability Challenge to Moral Intuitions
- Neurotechnological Applications and the Protection of Mental Privacy: An Assessment of Risks
- When Do People Have an Obligation Not to Tic? Blame, Free Will, and Moral Character Judgments of People with Tourette’s Syndrome
- Literary Neuroexistentialism: Coming to Terms with Materialism and Finding Meaning in the Age of Neuroscience through Literature
- The Ethical Implications of Illusionism
- How Do Psychedelics Reduce Fear of Death?
- Who does Neuroethics Scholarship Address, and What Does it Recommend? A Content Analysis of Selected Abstracts from the International Neuroethics Society Annual Meetings
- Autism and the Case Against Job Interviews
- "In the spectrum of people who are healthy": Views of individuals at risk of dementia on using neurotechnology for cognitive enhancement
- Perceptions on the Ethical and Legal Principles that Influence Global Brain Data Governance
- What Happens After a Neural Implant Study? Neuroethics Expert Workshop on Post-Trial Obligations
- Consciousness Ain’t All That
- Human Brain Organoid Transplantation: Testing the Foundations of Animal Research Ethics
- Stream of Consciousness: Some Propositions and Reflections
- “You shall have the thought”: habeas cogitationem as a New Legal Remedy to Enforce Freedom of Thinking and Neurorights
- Revisiting Maher’s One-Factor Theory of Delusion, Again
- Health Aspirations for Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS)
- The Psychological Process Underlying Attitudes Toward Human-Animal Chimeric Brain Research: An Empirical Investigation
- Psychedelic Therapy as Form of Life
- The Case Against Organoid Consciousness
- Ethical Implications of the Impact of Fracking on Brain Health
- Giving Consent to the Ineffable
- Safeguarding Users of Consumer Mental Health Apps in Research and Product Improvement Studies: an Interview Study
- Rewriting the Script: the Need for Effective Education to Address Racial Disparities in Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Uptake in BIPOC Communities
- Global Versus Local Theories of Consciousness and the Consciousness Assessment Issue in Brain Organoids
- Patentability of Brain Organoids derived from iPSC– A Legal Evaluation with Interdisciplinary Aspects
- What (if anything) morally separates environmental from neurochemical behavioral interventions?
- Dimensions of Consciousness and the Moral Status of Brain Organoids
- Caregivers of ALS Patients: Their Experiences and Needs
- When the Trial Ends: The Case for Post-Trial Provisions in Clinical Psychedelic Research
- Rationales and Approaches to Protecting Brain Data: a Scoping Review
- How to Advance the Debate on the Criminal Responsibility of Antisocial Offenders
- The Ethics of Human Brain Organoid Transplantation in Animals
- Neurointerventions in Criminal Justice: On the Scope of the Moral Right to Bodily Integrity
- Brain age Prediction and the Challenge of Biological Concepts of Aging
- Addiction and Volitional Abilities: Stakeholders’ Understandings and their Ethical and Practical Implications
- Potential Consciousness of Human Cerebral Organoids: on Similarity-Based Views in Precautionary Discourse
- Why Won’t You Listen To Me? Predictive Neurotechnology and Epistemic Authority
- Should Moral Bioenhancement Be Covert? A Response to Crutchfield
- The Mystery of Mental Integrity: Clarifying Its Relevance to Neurotechnologies
- Recruitment and Engagement of Indigenous Peoples in Brain-Related Health Research
- A Conceptual Framework to Safeguard the Neuroright to Personal Autonomy
- Hope and Optimism in Pediatric Deep Brain Stimulation: Key Stakeholder Perspectives
- Mild Cognitive Impairment in Relation to Alzheimer’s Disease: An Investigation of Principles, Classifications, Ethics, and Problems
- Revisiting Maher’s One-Factor Theory of Delusion
- The Role of Family Members in Psychiatric Deep Brain Stimulation Trials: More Than Psychosocial Support
- Normality and the Treatment-Enhancement Distinction
- Merging Minds: The Conceptual and Ethical Impacts of Emerging Technologies for Collective Minds
- Invasive Neurotechnology: A Study of the Concept of Invasiveness in Neuroethics
- Philosophical foundation of the right to mental integrity in the age of neurotechnologies
- Neurorights as Hohfeldian Privileges
- Mental Integrity in the Attention Economy: in Search of the Right to Attention
- Brain Death: Still A Puzzle After All These Years
- The Ethics of Memory Modification: Personal Narratives, Relational Selves and Autonomy
- Neurorights – Do we Need New Human Rights? A Reconsideration of the Right to Freedom of Thought
- Neurorehabilitation of Offenders, Consent and Consequentialist Ethics
- Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) in Pediatric Populations—– Voices from Typically Developing Children and Adolescents and their Parents
- Challenges to the Diagnosis of Functional Neurological Disorder: Feigning, Intentionality, and Responsibility
- Present and Emerging Ethical Issues with tDCS use: A Summary and Review
- Opportunity Cost or Opportunity Lost: An Empirical Assessment of Ethical Concerns and Attitudes of EEG Neurofeedback Users
- Societal Collapse and Intergenerational Disparities in Suffering
- The Unintended Consequences of Chile’s Neurorights Constitutional Reform: Moving beyond Negative Rights to Capabilities
- Engagement, Exploitation, and Human Intracranial Electrophysiology Research
- Informal Caregivers of Patients with Disorders of Consciousness: a Qualitative Study of Communication Experiences and Information Needs with Physicians
- The Impossibility of a Moral Right to Privacy
- Against Aggression? Revisiting an Overlooked Contender for Moral Bioenhancement
- Identifying the Presence of Ethics Concepts in Chronic Pain Research: A Scoping Review of Neuroscience Journals
- Towards a Governance Framework for Brain Data
- Trust and Psychedelic Moral Enhancement
- Review of Walter Glannon’s The Neuroethics of Memory: From Total Recall to Oblivion, Cambridge University Press, 2019
- Deep Brain Stimulation for Parkinson’s Disease: Why Earlier Use Makes Shared Decision Making Important
- The Illusion of Agency in Human–Computer Interaction
- Moral Neuroenhancement for Prisoners of War
- The Case of Hannah Capes: How Much Does Consciousness Matter?
- Do Different Kinds of Minds Need Different Kinds of Services? Qualitative Results from a Mixed-Method Survey of Service Preferences of Autistic Adults and Parents
- Neuroenhancements in the Military: A Mixed-Method Pilot Study on Attitudes of Staff Officers to Ethics and Rules
- Correction to: Human Brain Organoids and Consciousness
- Memory Modification and Authenticity: A Narrative Approach
- Unlocking the Voices of Patients with Severe Brain Injury
- Preserving Narrative Identity for Dementia Patients: Embodiment, Active Environments, and Distributed Memory
- Novel Neurorights: From Nonsense to Substance
- Concerns About Psychiatric Neurosurgery and How They Can Be Overcome: Recommendations for Responsible Research
- Human Brain Organoids and Consciousness
- Neither the “Devil’s Lettuce” nor a “Miracle Cure:” The Use of Medical Cannabis in the Care of Children and Youth
- On the Contribution of Neuroethics to the Ethics and Regulation of Artificial Intelligence
- Exculpation and Stigma in Tourette Syndrome
- Cognitive Diminishments and Crime Prevention: “Too Smart for the Rest of Us”?
- Pharmacological Cognitive Enhancement and Cheapened Achievement: A New Dilemma
- Correction to: First Epileptic Seizure and Initial Diagnosis of Juvenile Myoclonus Epilepsy (JME) in a Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) Study– Ethical Analysis of a Clinical Case
- Neuroparenting: the Myths and the Benefits. An Ethical Systematic Review
- An Afro-Communitarian Relational Approach to Brain Surrogates Research
- The Impact of Dementia on the Self: Do We Consider Ourselves the Same as Others?
- Chasing Certainty After Cardiac Arrest: Can a Technological Innovation Solve a Moral Dilemma?
- Revisiting Moral Bioenhancement and Autonomy
- Deterministic Attributions of Behavior: Brain versus Genes
- Losing Meaning: Philosophical Reflections on Neural Interventions and their Influence on Narrative Identity
- Recommendations for Responsible Development and Application of Neurotechnologies
- Borderline Personality Disorder and the Boundaries of Virtue
- Addiction is a Disability, and it Matters
- Embodiment, Movement and Agency in Neuroethics
- Shining a Light also Casts a Shadow: Neuroimaging Incidental Findings in Neuromarketing Research
- The Normative Implications of Recent Empirical Neuroethics Research on Moral Intuitions
- Pessimism Counts in Favor of Biomedical Enhancement: A Lesson from the Anti-Natalist Philosophy of P. W. Zapffe
- Next of kin’s Reactions to Results of Functional Neurodiagnostics of Disorders of Consciousness: a Question of Information Delivery or of Differing Epistemic Beliefs?
- Sport, Neuro-Doping and Ethics
- What it Might Be like to Be a Group Agent
- The Spectrum of Responsibility Ascription for End Users of Neurotechnologies
- Trait Self-Control, Inhibition, and Executive Functions: Rethinking some Traditional Assumptions
- Neurodoping in Chess to Enhance Mental Stamina
- Should Couch Potatoes Be Encouraged to Use Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation?
- Would Nonconsensual Criminal Neurorehabilitation Express a more Degrading Attitude Towards Offenders than Consensual Criminal Neurorehabilitation?
- The Authenticity of Machine-Augmented Human Intelligence: Therapy, Enhancement, and the Extended Mind
- In Defence of the Hivemind Society
- Neuro-Doping and the Value of Effort in Endurance Sports
- Narrative Devices: Neurotechnologies, Information, and Self-Constitution
- The Fragility of Moral Traits to Technological Interventions
- Disorders of Consciousness: An Embedded Ethnographic Approach to Uncovering the Specific Influence of Functional Neurodiagnostics of Consciousness in Surrogate Decision Making
- Neuro-Doping and Fairness
- Neuro-Doping – a Serious Threat to the Integrity of Sport?
- The Ethics of Motivational Neuro-Doping in Sport: Praiseworthiness and Prizeworthiness
- Neuro-Doping as a Means to Avert Fascistoid Ideology in Elite Sport
- Correction to: Pragmatismand the Importance of Interdisciplinary Teams in Investigating Personality Changes Following DBS
- First Epileptic Seizure and Initial Diagnosis of Juvenile Myoclonus Epilepsy (JME) in a Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) Study– Ethical Analysis of a Clinical case
- “Fueling up” Gamers. The Ethics of Marketing Energy Drinks to Gamers
- Determinism and Destigmatization: Mitigating Blame for Addiction
- Born which Way? ADHD, Situational Self-Control, and Responsibility
- Forensic Brain-Reading and Mental Privacy in European Human Rights Law: Foundations and Challenges
- Deflating the Deep Brain Stimulation Causes Personality Changes Bubble: the Authors Reply
- Retributivism, Justification and Credence: The Epistemic Argument Revisited
- Neurostimulation, doping, and the spirit of sport
- Respect, Punishment and Mandatory Neurointerventions
- Brain-Computer Interfaces and the Translation of Thought into Action
- Autism Spectrum Condition, Good and Bad Motives of Offending, and Sentencing
- A Dilemma For Neurodiversity
- Nonconscious Pain, Suffering, and Moral Status
- Delusion, Proper Function, and Justification
- How Does Functional Neurodiagnostics Inform Surrogate Decision-Making for Patients with Disorders of Consciousness? A Qualitative Interview Study with Patients’ Next of Kin
- How Will Families React to Evidence of Covert Consciousness in Brain-Injured Patients?
- Responsibility, Determinism, and the Objective Stance: Using IAT to Evaluate Strawson’s Account of our ‘Incompatibilist’ Intuitions
- Neuroenhancement, the Criminal Justice System, and the Problem of Alienation
- The (in)Significance of the Addiction Debate
- An Instrument to Capture the Phenomenology of Implantable Brain Device Use
- AI Assistants and the Paradox of Internal Automaticity
- The Limited Relevance of Neuroimaging in Insanity Evaluations
- The Locked-in Syndrome: Perspectives from Ethics, History, and Phenomenology
- DBS and Autonomy: Clarifying the Role of Theoretical Neuroethics
- Pragmatism and the Importance of Interdisciplinary Teams in Investigating Personality Changes Following DBS
- Changes in Personality Associated with Deep Brain Stimulation: a Qualitative Evaluation of Clinician Perspectives
- Committing Crimes with BCIs: How Brain-Computer Interface Users can Satisfy Actus Reus and be Criminally Responsible
- Impact of the Japanese Disability Homecare System on ALS Patients’ Decision to Receive Tracheostomy with Invasive Ventilation
- Brain Interventions, Moral Responsibility, and Control over One’s Mental Life
- The history of BCI: From a vision for the future to real support for personhood in people with locked-in syndrome
- On the Significance of the Identity Debate in DBS and the Need of an Inclusive Research Agenda. A Reply to Gilbert, Viana and Ineichen
- Justice Without Retribution: Interdisciplinary Perspectives, Stakeholder Views and Practical Implications
- Discussions of DBS in Neuroethics: Can We Deflate the Bubble Without Deflating Ethics?
- Regulating the Use of Cognitive Enhancement: an Analytic Framework
- ‘Woe Betides Anybody Who Tries to Turn me Down.’ A Qualitative Analysis of Neuropsychiatric Symptoms Following Subthalamic Deep Brain Stimulation for Parkinson’s Disease
- Neuroessentialism, our Technological Future, and DBS Bubbles
- Why Neurotechnologies? About the Purposes, Opportunities and Limitations of Neurotechnologies in Clinical Applications
- More than our Body: Minimal and Enactive Selfhood in Global Paralysis
- Locked-In Syndrome: a Challenge to Standard Accounts of Selfhood and Personhood?
- Why Internal Moral Enhancement Might Be politically Better than External Moral Enhancement
- Nonconsensual Neurocorrectives and Bodily Integrity: a Reply to Shaw and Barn
- Can Medical Interventions Serve as ‘Criminal Rehabilitation’?
- Procedural Moral Enhancement
- The Right to Bodily Integrity and the Rehabilitation of Offenders Through Medical Interventions: A Reply to Thomas Douglas
- The Tragedy of Biomedical Moral Enhancement
- Saving the World through Sacrificing Liberties? A Critique of some Normative Arguments in Unfit for the Future
- Pow(d)er to the People? Voter Manipulation, Legitimacy, and the Relevance of Moral Psychology for Democratic Theory
- Determinism, Moral Responsibility and Retribution
- A critical analysis of Australia’s ban on the sale of electronic nicotine delivery systems
- What we (Should) Talk about when we Talk about Deep Brain Stimulation and Personal Identity
- Cognitive Enhancement vs. Plagiarism: a Quantitative Study on the Attitudes of an Italian Sample
- Artificial Intelligence as a Socratic Assistant for Moral Enhancement
- The Meta-Analysis of Neuro-Marketing Studies: Past, Present and Future
- Australian Psychotherapy for Trauma Incorporating Neuroscience: Evidence- and Ethics-Informed Practice
- Neuroscience and Punishment: From Theory to Practice
- Neurolaw in Australia: The Use of Neuroscience in Australian Criminal Proceedings
- Valuing Emotions in Punishment: an Argument for Social Rehabilitation with the Aid of Social and Affective Neuroscience
- Evidence-Based Neuroethics, Deep Brain Stimulation and Personality – Deflating, but not Bursting, the Bubble
- Phenomenology of the Locked-In Syndrome: an Overview and Some Suggestions
- Pharmacological Cognitive Enhancement: Examining the Ethical Principles Guiding College Students’ Abstention
- It’s Not Just Counting that Counts: a Reply to Gilbert, Viaña, and Ineichen
- The Ethical and Empirical Status of Dimensional Diagnosis: Implications for Public Mental Health?
- Correction to: Deflating the “DBS Causes Personality Changes” Bubble
- Correction to: Deflating the “DBS causes personality changes” bubble
- Information Processing Biases in the Brain: Implications for Decision-Making and Self-Governance
- The Role of Emotion Regulation in Moral Judgment
- Understanding Self-Control as a Whole vs. Part Dynamic
- Updating our Selves: Synthesizing Philosophical and Neurobiological Perspectives on Incorporating New Information into our Worldview
- Decision-Making and Self-Governing Systems
- More Autonomous or more Fenced-in? Neuroscientific Instruments and Intervention in Criminal Justice
- Intensity of Experience: Maher’s Theory of Schizophrenic Delusion Revisited
- Embodiment in Neuro-engineering Endeavors: Phenomenological Considerations and Practical Implications
- Bodily Felt Freedom: an Ethical Perspective on Positive Aspects of Deep Brain Stimulation
- Free Will, Self-Governance and Neuroscience: An Overview
- Incapacitation, Reintegration, and Limited General Deterrence
- Review of Gregg D. Caruso and Owen Flanagan (eds.), Neuroexistentialism: Meaning, Morals, & Purpose in the Age of Neuroscience, Oxford University Press, 2018, 392pp., ISBN: 9780190460730
- Review of Gregg D. Caruso and Owen Flanagan (eds.), Neuroexistentialism: Meaning, Morals, & Purpose in the Age of Neuroscience, Oxford University Press, 2018, 392pp., ISBN: 9780190460730
- Metamorality without Moral Truth
- Attitudes towards Personhood in the Locked-in Syndrome: from Third- to First- Person Perspective and to Interpersonal Significance
- Phenomenological Analysis of a Japanese Professional Caregiver Specialized in Patients with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
- Debates over Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Mental Health Evaluations at Guantánamo
- Addressing Depression through Psychotherapy, Medication, or Social Change: An Empirical Investigation
- Deflating the “DBS causes personality changes” bubble
- A History of the Locked-In-Syndrome: Ethics in the Making of Neurological Consciousness, 1880-Present
- Neuroethics and Philosophy in Responsible Research and Innovation: The Case of the Human Brain Project
- Forensic Practitioners’ Views on Stimulating Moral Development and Moral Growth in Forensic Psychiatric Care
- Can they Feel? The Capacity for Pain and Pleasure in Patients with Cognitive Motor Dissociation
- Big Brain Data: On the Responsible Use of Brain Data from Clinical and Consumer-Directed Neurotechnological Devices
- Biocriminal Justice: Exploring Public Attitudes to Criminal Rehabilitation Using Biomedical Treatments
- Should Neuroscience Inform Judgements of Decision-Making Capacity?
- Enhancing the Nature-of-Activities Account of Enhancement
- Justice, Reciprocity and the Internalisation of Punishment in Victims of Crime
- Bottom Up Ethics – Neuroenhancement in Education and Employment
- Neuroethics, Cognitive Technologies and the Extended Mind Perspective
- An Analysis of the Impact of Brain-Computer Interfaces on Autonomy
- On the normative insignificance of neuroscience and dual-process theory
- Benign Biological Interventions to Reduce Offending
- Psychopathy, Executive Functions, and Neuropsychological Data: a Response to Sifferd and Hirstein
- Ethics of Deep Brain Stimulation in Adolescent Patients with Refractory Tourette Syndrome: a Systematic Review and Two Case Discussions
- Justice without Retribution: An Epistemic Argument against Retributive Criminal Punishment
- Medical Decision Making by Patients in the Locked-in Syndrome
- Phantom Sensations: A Neurophenomenological Exploration of Body Memory
- Deep Brain Stimulation, Self and Relational Autonomy
- Social Policy and Cognitive Enhancement: Lessons from Chess
- Introduction: Political Implications of Moral Enhancement
- Beyond Moral Responsibility to a System that Works
- The Moral Importance of Reflective Empathy
- The Role of Neuroscience in the Evaluation of Mental Insanity: on the Controversies in Italy
- Looking for Neuroethics in Japan
- A Critical Review of Methodologies and Results in Recent Research on Belief in Free Will
- Delusions, Harmful Dysfunctions, and Treatable Conditions
- Moral Responsibility and Mental Illness: a Call for Nuance
- From ‘Hard’ Neuro-Tools to ‘Soft’ Neuro-Toys? Refocussing the Neuro-Enhancement Debate
- The Multiplicity of Memory Enhancement: Practical and Ethical Implications of the Diverse Neural Substrates Underlying Human Memory Systems
- Biomedical Moral Enhancement – not a Lever without a Fulcrum
- The Irrelevance of a Moral Right to Privacy for Biomedical Moral Enhancement
- Autism and Moral Responsibility: Executive Function, Reasons Responsiveness, and Reasons Blockage
- Direct Brain Interventions, Changing Values and the Argument from Objectification – a Reply to Elizabeth Shaw
- Public Attitudes Towards Moral Enhancement. Evidence that Means Matter Morally
- Higher and Lower Pleasures Revisited: Evidence from Neuroscience
- Towards a Moral Ecology of Pharmacological Cognitive Enhancement in British Universities
- Emerging Ethical Issues Related to the Use of Brain-Computer Interfaces for Patients with Total Locked-in Syndrome
- Is the Personal Identity Debate a “Threat” to Neurosurgical Patients? A Reply to Müller et al.
- Personal Autonomy and Authenticity: Adolescents’ Discretionary Use of Methylphenidate
- Draining the Will to Make the Sale: The Impermissibility of Marketing by Ego-Depletion
- How Should Free Will Skeptics Pursue Legal Change?
- Deep Brain Stimulation: Inducing Self-Estrangement
- Q: Is Addiction a Brain Disease or a Moral Failing? A: Neither
- Adam Smith’s Theory of Prudence Updated with Neuroscientific and Behavioral Evidence
- A Morass of Musings on Moralization. Reply to Frank and Nagel
- Enough Comparing! Addiction is Its own Thing. Reply to Matthews
- Searching for Norms to Violate. Reply to Henden & Gjelsvik
- Once More, with Feeling! Reply to Ainslie
- Brains are Important Too: Reply to Hall, Carter, and Barnett
- A Continuum is a Continuum, and Swans are Not Geese. Reply to Fenton & Wiers
- Neurocentrism and Name-Calling: Let’s Agree to Agree. Reply to Satel & Lilienfeld
- What Evolution Intended? Reply to Wakefield
- Resetting the Brain as Well as the Nomenclature. Reply to Szalavitz
- No Need for the Disease Label: Choice is Complicated. Reply to Heather
- Self-Efficacy: Now You See It, Now You Don’t. Reply to Snoek
- A Graded Approach to “Disease” — Help or Hindrance? Reply to Berridge
- Choice Isn’t Simple. Reply to Pickard
- Yes, Precision is a Good thing. Reply to Flanagan
- Moral Enhancement Should Target Self-Interest and Cognitive Capacity
- Can the Harmful Dysfunction Analysis Explain Why Addiction is a Medical Disorder?: Reply to Marc Lewis
- What Is Wrong with the Brains of Addicts?
- Squaring the Circle: Addiction, Disease and Learning
- If Addiction is not Best Conceptualized a Brain Disease, then What Kind of Disease is it?
- Erratum to: Threats to Neurosurgical Patients Posed by the Personal Identity Debate
- Chronic Automaticity in Addiction: Why Extreme Addiction is a Disorder
- Pushing the Margins of Responsibility: Lessons from Parks’ Somnambulistic Killing
- Amnestic MCI Patients’ Perspectives toward Disclosure of Amyloid PET Results in a Research Context
- How to Recover from a Brain Disease: Is Addiction a Disease, or Is there a Disease-like Stage in Addiction?
- Introduction: Testing and Refining Marc Lewis’s Critique of the Brain Disease Model of Addiction
- Review of Nada Gligorov: Neuroethics and the Scientific Revision of Common Sense
- Addiction and Moralization: the Role of the Underlying Model of Addiction
- “Should We Treat Vegetative and Minimally Conscious Patients as Persons?”
- Monkey Business? Development, Influence, and Ethics of Potentially Dual-Use Brain Science on the World Stage
- Disease or Developmental Disorder: Competing Perspectives on the Neuroscience of Addiction
- Views of Caregivers on the Ethics of Assistive Technology Used for Home Surveillance of People Living with Dementia
- Does Kantian Ethics Condone Mood and Cognitive Enhancement?
- Threats to Neurosurgical Patients Posed by the Personal Identity Debate
- Addiction Doesn’t Exist, But it is Bad for You
- Addiction and the Brain: Development, Not Disease
- Responsibility without Blame for Addiction
- Deep Brain Stimulation Through the “Lens of Agency”: Clarifying Threats to Personal Identity from Neurological Intervention
- Why Enhancing Autonomy Is Not a Question of Improving Single Aspects of Reasoning Abilities through Neuroenhancement
- Addiction and the Concept of Disorder, Part 2: Is every Mental Disorder a Brain Disorder?