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Cyberneuroethics • 149
into the brains of other men or women having a sexual relationship and live
the same pleasurable experiences, which could have huge implications for the
sex industry. It may even be possible for a single person to experience, for the
first time, both the male and female orgasms.
However, the use of such robotic, virtual or human surrogates may have
very important consequences in relation to how a person may consider his or
her own identity. Thus, neuronal interfaces should be carefully considered in
terms of their impact on identity and the associated, anthropological, social,
ethical and psychological questions that arise.
Online Identities
As already noted, many people now spend a substantial proportion of their
waking lives online or interacting with the digital environment, and future
generations may experience even less of real life than was the case before the
advent of computers. In recent years, social networking has expanded to
include professional networking sites and other forms of expressions such
as blogging, Twitter, avatars, gaming, personal webpages or membership of
various Internet discussion groups. Mobile technologies are playing a role
in driving change, with new formats and applications (apps) being launched
to run on smartphones. This may mean that the notion of computers being
separate from people is changing, since many individuals now keep a per-
sonal networked computer, in the form of their smartphone, with them all
the time.204
Online platforms are also being changed both radically and rapidly in
a proliferation of communication technologies that can be described as a
‘poly-media’ environment.205 Individuals now use different appliances simul-
taneously or to complement one another.206 Identities across online support
systems may be broadly similar or may shift in emphasis, such as from a pro-
fessional to a social identity, and shift between media, such as text messaging
versus face-to-face conversations via a webcam.
The poly-media environment also requires an individual’s identity to per-
form different functions at different times in a digital networked world, such
as when a person uses an online bank, makes purchases from an online retail
website or participates in social media.207
It is difficult to speculate on the likely impact of growing hyper-
connectivity on identity. People may find it harder to disconnect themselves
or to maintain distinct identities in different situations. The increasingly
networked state of many people’s lives could blur the boundaries between
online and offline identities, as well as between work and social identities.
The advent of widespread mobile technology and email has also led to an
increasing number of persons remaining connected to their work during
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Buch Cyborg Mind - What Brain–Computer and Mind–Cyberspace Interfaces Mean for Cyberneuroethics"
Cyborg Mind
What Brain–Computer and Mind–Cyberspace Interfaces Mean for Cyberneuroethics
- Titel
- Cyborg Mind
- Untertitel
- What Brain–Computer and Mind–Cyberspace Interfaces Mean for Cyberneuroethics
- Autor
- Calum MacKellar
- Verlag
- Berghahn Books
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-1-78920-015-7
- Abmessungen
- 15.2 x 22.9 cm
- Seiten
- 264
- Schlagwörter
- Singularity, Transhumanism, Body modification, Bioethics
- Kategorie
- Technik
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Chapter 1. Why Use the Term ‘Cyberneuroethics’? 9
- Chapter 2. Popular Understanding of Neuronal Interfaces 25
- Chapter 3. Presentation of the Brain–Mind Interface 31
- Chapter 4. Neuronal Interface Systems 43
- Developments in Information Technology 44
- Developments in Understanding the Brain 45
- Developments in Neuronal Interfaces 46
- Procedures Involved in Neuronal Interfaces 47
- Output Neuronal Interface Systems: Reading the Brain and Mind 49
- Input Neuronal Interface Systems: Changing the Brain and Mind 57
- Feedback Systems of the Brain and Mind 67
- Ethical Issues Relating to the Technology of Neuronal Interfaces 84
- Chapter 5. Cyberneuroethics 99
- Chapter 6. Neuronal Interfaces and Policy 217
- New Cybercrimes 218
- Policy Concerns 223
- Conclusion 229
- Human Autonomy 232
- Resistance to Such a Development 234
- Risks of Neuronal Interfaces 234
- Appendix. Scottish Council on Human Bioethics Recommendations on
- Cyberneuroethics 239
- Glossary 244
- Index 251