Neuroscience and Society
Advances in neuroscience research are rapidly redefining what it means to be human. The absence of the brain/mind dichotomy has, in turn, removed the separation between our brain biology and our sociocultural experiences, raising questions for social sciences to address. How responsible are we, as individuals, for our actions? Do we have free will? Is it ethical for us to peer into others’ brains? How are our collective social cultural norms influenced by our brain function? At the same time, neuroscientists need to develop better intuition about the ethical, legal, and social implications of their research. Close collaboration between neuroscience and social sciences is the best way forward.

This book acts as an introduction to these and other issues that lie at the interface of neuroscience and social sciences, using the physiological underpinnings of our decision-making processes as a framework. Examples of topics addressed here are:

  • Neuroscience and economics
  • Neuroscience and law
  • Neuroscience and ethics
  • Neuroscience and mental health
  • Neuroscience of religion and humour

The book is intended for students of neuroscience and social sciences, as well as readers generally interested in the human condition. It is hoped that the book will stimulate cross-disciplinary thinking and inspire a new generation of thinkers who are willing to look at both social sciences and neuroscience research with a different lens. Such bridge builders will be the pioneers of the next level of interrogation at this emerging interface.

1147048511
Neuroscience and Society
Advances in neuroscience research are rapidly redefining what it means to be human. The absence of the brain/mind dichotomy has, in turn, removed the separation between our brain biology and our sociocultural experiences, raising questions for social sciences to address. How responsible are we, as individuals, for our actions? Do we have free will? Is it ethical for us to peer into others’ brains? How are our collective social cultural norms influenced by our brain function? At the same time, neuroscientists need to develop better intuition about the ethical, legal, and social implications of their research. Close collaboration between neuroscience and social sciences is the best way forward.

This book acts as an introduction to these and other issues that lie at the interface of neuroscience and social sciences, using the physiological underpinnings of our decision-making processes as a framework. Examples of topics addressed here are:

  • Neuroscience and economics
  • Neuroscience and law
  • Neuroscience and ethics
  • Neuroscience and mental health
  • Neuroscience of religion and humour

The book is intended for students of neuroscience and social sciences, as well as readers generally interested in the human condition. It is hoped that the book will stimulate cross-disciplinary thinking and inspire a new generation of thinkers who are willing to look at both social sciences and neuroscience research with a different lens. Such bridge builders will be the pioneers of the next level of interrogation at this emerging interface.

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Neuroscience and Society

Neuroscience and Society

Neuroscience and Society

Neuroscience and Society

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Overview

Advances in neuroscience research are rapidly redefining what it means to be human. The absence of the brain/mind dichotomy has, in turn, removed the separation between our brain biology and our sociocultural experiences, raising questions for social sciences to address. How responsible are we, as individuals, for our actions? Do we have free will? Is it ethical for us to peer into others’ brains? How are our collective social cultural norms influenced by our brain function? At the same time, neuroscientists need to develop better intuition about the ethical, legal, and social implications of their research. Close collaboration between neuroscience and social sciences is the best way forward.

This book acts as an introduction to these and other issues that lie at the interface of neuroscience and social sciences, using the physiological underpinnings of our decision-making processes as a framework. Examples of topics addressed here are:

  • Neuroscience and economics
  • Neuroscience and law
  • Neuroscience and ethics
  • Neuroscience and mental health
  • Neuroscience of religion and humour

The book is intended for students of neuroscience and social sciences, as well as readers generally interested in the human condition. It is hoped that the book will stimulate cross-disciplinary thinking and inspire a new generation of thinkers who are willing to look at both social sciences and neuroscience research with a different lens. Such bridge builders will be the pioneers of the next level of interrogation at this emerging interface.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781032709178
Publisher: CRC Press
Publication date: 08/07/2025
Series: Frontiers in Neuroscience
Pages: 198
Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 10.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Dr. Sukumar Vijayaraghavan is an euroscientist and professor at the Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Colorado, School of Medicine. He has wide-ranging interests from synaptic transmission, olfaction, and drug addiction to graduate education and the interaction between neuroscience and social sciences.

Dr. Gidon Felsen is a professor in the Department of Physiology and Biophysics at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. His research focuses on the neural mechanisms of decisions and actions under normal and pathological conditions and on how neuroscience can inform societally relevant questions.

Table of Contents

List of Contributors

Preface

Chapter 1: Introduction: The Neuroscience of Decision Making

Chapter 2: Behavioral Economics and Neuroeconomics: A Brief History and Overview

Chapter 3: Neuroscience and the Free Will Debate

Chapter 4: Neurolaw: Overview, Past, Present, Future

Chapter 5: Neurolaw and Psychiatry

Chapter 6: Stochastic Determinism and Criminal Law

Chapter 7: Neuroscience in Psychiatry

Chapter 8: Introduction to Neuroethics

Chapter 9: The Capacity for Evaluation of the Human Brain and Its Implications for an Artificial Moral Subject

Chapter 10: The Neuroscience of Humor

Chapter 11: The Neuroscientific Study of Religious and Spiritual Phenomena

Index

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