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Technology, Neuroscience & the Nature of Being:
Considerations of Meaning, Morality & Transcendence (Part I)

The Nour Foundation
Blackfriars Hall, Oxford University
Georgetown University Symposium Series

The aim of this three-part symposium series is to provide a forum for the launch of high-level interdisciplinary discussions intended to address and overcome the increasing isolation and fragmentation of the disciplines devoted to the science and advancement of the human person. The conferences, which will take place at Georgetown, Oxford University, and the United Nations in New York, will seek to incorporate recent advances in neuroscience into a more comprehensive paradigm that is consistent with what is known of the human condition from a philosophical, psychological, and theological perspective. In so doing, they will also examine the phenomenological and spiritual dimensions of human experience that have often been absent from or subordinated within contemporary technologically-oriented approaches to models of the human person and the psychology of the self. The discussions will strive to reconcile the neuroscientific perspectives of the human person with the naturalistic values of ethical and moral action by examining the possibilities for establishing a system of common morality as a grounding human ecology that will enable multidisciplinary investigations into the full spectrum of human experience.

Part I: The Paradox of Neurotechnology

Though neurotechnologies have allowed unparalleled capability to bring groups of individuals together through rapid communication and informational delivery while at the same time providing invaluable insight into the workings of the brain, the paradox remains that these technologies may also incur more dystopian possibilities by isolating individuals as disjointed selves that are only artificially—and therefore superficially—connected to others, thus remaining aloof from the meaning or moral realities of inter-subjective, interpersonal relationships. As it is through the pace of our discovery that we are poised at the boundaries of knowledge and possibility, it behooves us to acknowledge that these boundaries exist, take measure of their margins, recognize the limits of our current knowledge, and advance our investigations with prudent precaution. Such circumspection need not impede the pace or progress of scientific and technologic development; rather, what is called for is careful reflection on what we know, how we know it, and the values and beliefs that drive the quest for knowledge and its applications.

In this first of a three-part series of conferences, the participants will discuss new neurotechnologies, their effects in treatment and enhancement, and the questions they raise concerning the nature and identity of the human person. Unlike the hand or the face, for example, the brain is not an expression of the person, nor is it something other than the person. Yet individuals do not remain unaltered by treatments that affect their brains, in the way that they remain unaltered, for instance, by treatments that affect their hands. Our understanding of other people, of what can and cannot be done to them, and of what is needed to repair damage and bring them back to normality all presuppose a constancy of personality and a continuity of memory. But what happens when such treatment disrupts or destroys those things? Do we have the means to resolve the moral and psychological questions that will then arise? And if not, how should we proceed with the use of neurotechnology?

Featured Speakers

Sheri Alpert, Ph.D., MPA Dennis McBride, Ph.D., MPA
Kevin FitzGerald, S.J., Ph.D. Erik Parens, Ph.D.
James Giordano, Ph.D. Sam Parnia, M.D., Ph.D.
Layne Kalbfleisch, Ph.D. Susan Schneider, Ph.D
Jeffrey L. Krichmar, Ph.D. Roger Scruton

Time:   10:00 a.m.
Date:   Friday, May 8, 2009
Location: Georgetown University, Medical-Dental Building, Room SW 107
Open Admission.

To learn more click here.

 

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