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What is it like to be ‘tuned’? Moral lessons drawn from experiences of enhancement
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Bernard Baertschi
Published/Copyright:
February 5, 2016
Online erschienen: 2016-2-5
Erschienen im Druck: 2015-7-1
© 2016 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Titelei
- Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Editorial
- I. Beiträge
- Selbstfahrende Autos und Trolley-Probleme: Zum Aufrechnen von Menschenleben im Falle unausweichlicher Unfälle
- Kultürlichkeit statt Natürlichkeit: Ein vernachlässigtes Argument in der bioethischen Debatte um Enhancement und Anthropotechnik
- Themenschwerpunkt: Neurowissenschaften und Neurorecht
- Prolegomena zu den praktischen Herausforderungen der Neurowissenschaften
- Strafrechtliche Willensfreiheit und zivilrechtliche Freiheit der Willensbestimmung aus Sicht der Hirnforschung
- The ethical imperative of ascertaining and respecting the wishes of the minimally conscious patient facing a life-or-death decision
- Should there be a right to die with dignity in certain medical cases in the United Kingdom? Some reflections on the decision of the United Kingdom Supreme Court regarding the protection afforded by Article 8 of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights
- Obtaining informed consent through use of brain-computer interfaces? Future perspectives in medical health care
- Potential legal implications of advances in neuroimaging techniques for the clinical management of patients with disorders of consciousness
- Thinking on patients’ behalf: attitudes of healthcare providers towards medico-ethical issues in non-communicating patients
- Ethical, Social and Clinical Challenges in using Deep Brain Stimulation to Treat Addiction and Other Impulsive and Compulsive Disorders
- What is it like to be ‘tuned’? Moral lessons drawn from experiences of enhancement
- The human rights of nonhuman artificial entities: an oxymoron?
- Understanding the brain: Challenges for neuroethics
- II. Bericht
- Die neue Deklaration von Helsinki
- III. Dokumentation
- Recommendation CM / Rec (2015) 2 of the Committee of Ministers to member States on the promotion of human rights of older persons
- Stellungnahme Nr. 28 Ethik der Sicherheits- und Überwachungstechnologien
- Anticipate and Communicate Ethical Management of Incidental and Secondary Findings in the Clinical, Research, and Direct-to- Consumer Contexts
- Gray Matters: Integrative Approaches for Neuroscience, Ethics, and Society
- International trade in human eggs, surrogacy and organs
- The Danish Council of Ethics’ statement on the use of antibiotics
- Biosicherheit – Freiheit und Verantwortung in der Wissenschaft
- Ärztliches Handeln zwischen Berufsethos und Ökonomisierung. Das Beispiel der Verträge mit leitenden Klinikärztinnen und -ärzten
- IAP Statement on Realising Global Potential in Synthetic Biology: Scientific Opportunities and Good Governance
- Verzeichnis der Autoren und Organisationen
- Hinweise für Autoren
Articles in the same Issue
- Titelei
- Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Editorial
- I. Beiträge
- Selbstfahrende Autos und Trolley-Probleme: Zum Aufrechnen von Menschenleben im Falle unausweichlicher Unfälle
- Kultürlichkeit statt Natürlichkeit: Ein vernachlässigtes Argument in der bioethischen Debatte um Enhancement und Anthropotechnik
- Themenschwerpunkt: Neurowissenschaften und Neurorecht
- Prolegomena zu den praktischen Herausforderungen der Neurowissenschaften
- Strafrechtliche Willensfreiheit und zivilrechtliche Freiheit der Willensbestimmung aus Sicht der Hirnforschung
- The ethical imperative of ascertaining and respecting the wishes of the minimally conscious patient facing a life-or-death decision
- Should there be a right to die with dignity in certain medical cases in the United Kingdom? Some reflections on the decision of the United Kingdom Supreme Court regarding the protection afforded by Article 8 of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights
- Obtaining informed consent through use of brain-computer interfaces? Future perspectives in medical health care
- Potential legal implications of advances in neuroimaging techniques for the clinical management of patients with disorders of consciousness
- Thinking on patients’ behalf: attitudes of healthcare providers towards medico-ethical issues in non-communicating patients
- Ethical, Social and Clinical Challenges in using Deep Brain Stimulation to Treat Addiction and Other Impulsive and Compulsive Disorders
- What is it like to be ‘tuned’? Moral lessons drawn from experiences of enhancement
- The human rights of nonhuman artificial entities: an oxymoron?
- Understanding the brain: Challenges for neuroethics
- II. Bericht
- Die neue Deklaration von Helsinki
- III. Dokumentation
- Recommendation CM / Rec (2015) 2 of the Committee of Ministers to member States on the promotion of human rights of older persons
- Stellungnahme Nr. 28 Ethik der Sicherheits- und Überwachungstechnologien
- Anticipate and Communicate Ethical Management of Incidental and Secondary Findings in the Clinical, Research, and Direct-to- Consumer Contexts
- Gray Matters: Integrative Approaches for Neuroscience, Ethics, and Society
- International trade in human eggs, surrogacy and organs
- The Danish Council of Ethics’ statement on the use of antibiotics
- Biosicherheit – Freiheit und Verantwortung in der Wissenschaft
- Ärztliches Handeln zwischen Berufsethos und Ökonomisierung. Das Beispiel der Verträge mit leitenden Klinikärztinnen und -ärzten
- IAP Statement on Realising Global Potential in Synthetic Biology: Scientific Opportunities and Good Governance
- Verzeichnis der Autoren und Organisationen
- Hinweise für Autoren