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

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 II: Brain, Mind & The Nature of Being

As the fields that are broadly grouped under the rubric of neuroscience provide increasingly more information about the structure and function of neural systems and the brain, it becomes relatively easier to accept and use this data as "facts" to guide, if not actually dictate, our perspectives and activities. Indeed, in the past decade neuroscience has become something of a focal point for applications of genetic and nanotechnologies. The pace of neuroscientific discovery is fueled in part by the synergy of new technology in these and other areas, as neuroscientific advances are both being applied in medicine and integrated into the fabric of social conduct and daily life. This in turn has spawned incipient fields of "neuroeconomics," "neuromarketing," "neurolaw," "neurotheology," etc. But given the reality that knowledge of the brain and mind remains incomplete and contingent, the ‘neuro' prefix seems to have become synecdoche for the reductionist/anti-reductionist debate in each of the areas in which it is used, prompting us to consider what some have regarded as "the limits of neuro-talk."
 
This gathering of prominent scholars will address the question of whether neurotechnology can provide an accurate insight to the mind, and what changes might be needed in the theories and concepts of neuroscience and evolutionary psychology if a holistic concept of the human person is really to emerge from our progress. Participants will discuss the possibility and implications of reciprocal interactions of body, brain-mind, and environment; the viability of a "self," the relationality of the person to other persons and perhaps organic and non-organic (machine-based) organisms; the putative nature of virtue and responsibility; issues of will, deliberation, and determination in decision-making, and consideration of what these variables imply for aesthetic and creative experience and practices. In sum, this discourse will generate a wider view of how neuroscientific progress interacts with, and perhaps impacts, the past, present, and future constructs of the human condition, and how these constructs might evolve.

Featured Speakers

Roland Benedikter, Ph.D. Elie During, Ph.D.
James Giordano, Ph.D. Peter Hacker, Ph.D.
John Hyman, Ph.D. Parashkev Nachev, Ph.D., MRCP
Geraint Rees, Ph.D., FRCP Roger Scruton, Ph.D.

Time:   9:30 a.m.
Date:   July 22, 2009
Location: Oxford University
              loannou Centre for Classical Studies
              Lecture Theatre
              66 St Giles', Oxford, OX1 3LU.

To learn more click here.

 

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