Theological neuroethics : Christian ethics meets the science of the human brain
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Theological neuroethics : Christian ethics meets the science of the human brain
(T&T Clark enquiries in theological ethics)
Bloomsbury T&T Clark, 2017
- : hb
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Note
Bibliography: p. [182]-207
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Neil Messer brings together a range of theoretical and practical questions raised by current research on the human brain: questions about both the 'ethics of neuroscience' and the 'neuroscience of ethics'. While some of these are familiar to theologians, others have been more or less ignored hitherto, and the field of neuroethics as a whole has received little theological attention.
Drawing on both theological ethics and the science-and-theology field, Messer discusses cognitive-scientific and neuroscientific studies of religion, arguing that they do not give grounds to dismiss theological perspectives on the human self. He examines a representative range of topics across the whole field of neuroethics, including consciousness, the self and the value of human life; the neuroscience of morality; determinism, freewill and moral responsibility; and the ethics of cognitive enhancement.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction: Where Science, Theology and Ethics Collide?
Chapter 2
Pious Primates with Believing Brains: Evolutionary, Cognitive and Neuroscientific Accounts of Religion
Chapter 3
Selves, Souls and Consciousness: Uncle Charlie Revisited
Chapter 3
Neuroscience, Moral Judgement and the Theological Suspicion of Ethics
Chapter 4
'Like God, Knowing Good and Evil' The Neuroscience of Morality and the theological suspicion of ethics
Chapter 5
Freedom, Responsibility, Sin and Grace: 'Mr Puppet' meets St Augustine
Chapter 6
Messing with Our Minds: The Ethics of Technological Interventions in the Brain
Chapter 7
Conclusion: Collision or Creative Meeting?
Bibliography
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"