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Cyborg Mind - What Brain–Computer and Mind–Cyberspace Interfaces Mean for Cyberneuroethics
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Cyberneuroethics • 195 13. Green, Babies by Design, 147–53. 14. Nuffield Council on Bioethics,Genetics and Human Behaviour, 153–54. 15. Forster, ‘The Machine Stops’. 16. Brandon, ‘The Medium is the Message’, 2. 17. Fredette et al., ‘The Promise and Peril of Hyperconnectivity’. 18. Office for National Statistics, Internet Access. 19. Biggs, ‘Emerging Issues’. 20. Hulme, Life Support. 21. Eynon and Geniets, On the Periphery? 22. BBC News, ‘S Korean Dies after Games Session’. 23. Lee, ‘South Korea Pulls Plug’. 24. Gorlick, ‘Media Multitaskers Pay Mental Price’; Ophir, Nass and Wagner. 2009. ‘Cognitive Control in Media Multitaskers’. 25. Gorlick, ‘Media Multitaskers Pay Mental Price’. 26. Ibid. 27. Foresight Future Identities, Final Project Report, 22–24. 28. De Castella, ‘Could Work Emails Be Banned after 6pm?’ 29. Ibid. 30. It may even become such a significant part of life that three kinds of death may, at pres- ent, exist: cardiac death, brain death and disconnection from the network. See Mattei, ‘Le corps sera-t-il encore humain?’, 78. 31. Berg, ‘Will Google Glasses Make Us Cyborgs?’ 32. Blair, ‘Mind Healing’. 33. Dade, ‘Transnationalism, Foreign Assistance, Domestic Communities’; Vertovec, ‘Trends and Impacts of Migrant Transnationalism’. 34. Bourn, ‘Young People, Identity and Living in a Global Society’. 35. Gutierrez, Vexo and Thalmann, Stepping into Virtual Reality. 36. Bainbridge, Online Multiplayer Games. 37. Clark, ‘Second Life Creator Linden Lab Downsizes’. 38. Castronova, Synthetic Worlds. 39. Wagner, ‘Second Life CEO Looks to the Future’. 40. Clark, ‘Second Life Creator Linden Lab Downsizes’. 41. Heim, The Metaphysics of Virtual Reality, 83. 42. Ellison, Social Media and Identity. 43. Dutton and Blank, ‘Next Generation Users’. 44. Miller, What is the Relationship between Identities? 45. Foresight Future Identities, Final Project Report, 27–28. 46. Miller, What is the Relationship between Identities? 47. Harb, ‘Arab Revolutions’. 48. ‘Are We Becoming Cyborgs?’ 49. Bocquelet et al., ‘Ethical Reflections on Brain-Computer Interfaces’, 261–88. 50. Greenfield, Tomorrow’s People, 43. 51. EUCogIII Project Final Report, ‘3rd European Network’. 52. Ibid. 53. Luber and Lisanby, ‘Enhancement of Human Cognitive Performance’, 961, quoted in Braude, ‘Enhancing Cognition in the “Brain Nation”’, 137. 54. Chan and Harris, ‘Cognitive Regeneration or Enhancement’; Greely et al., ‘Towards Responsible Use’; Foresight Mental Capital and Wellbeing Project, Final Project Report. 55. Hamilton, Messing and Chatterjee, ‘Rethinking the Thinking Cap’. This open access edition has been made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license thanks to the support of Knowledge Unlatched. Not for resale.
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Cyborg Mind What Brain–Computer and Mind–Cyberspace Interfaces Mean for Cyberneuroethics
Title
Cyborg Mind
Subtitle
What Brain–Computer and Mind–Cyberspace Interfaces Mean for Cyberneuroethics
Author
Calum MacKellar
Publisher
Berghahn Books
Date
2019
Language
English
License
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
ISBN
978-1-78920-015-7
Size
15.2 x 22.9 cm
Pages
264
Keywords
Singularity, Transhumanism, Body modification, Bioethics
Category
Technik

Table of contents

  1. Chapter 1. Why Use the Term ‘Cyberneuroethics’? 9
    1. The ‘Cyber’ Prefix 9
    2. The ‘Neuro’ Prefix 15
    3. Ethics 16
    4. Neuroethics 17
    5. Cyberneuroethics 18
    6. The Terminology Being Used 19
  2. Chapter 2. Popular Understanding of Neuronal Interfaces 25
    1. Public Understanding in the Media 27
  3. Chapter 3. Presentation of the Brain–Mind Interface 31
    1. The Central Nervous System 31
    2. The Mind 37
    3. The Brain–Mind Interface 38
  4. Chapter 4. Neuronal Interface Systems 43
    1. Developments in Information Technology 44
    2. Developments in Understanding the Brain 45
    3. Developments in Neuronal Interfaces 46
    4. Procedures Involved in Neuronal Interfaces 47
    5. Output Neuronal Interface Systems: Reading the Brain and Mind 49
    6. Input Neuronal Interface Systems: Changing the Brain and Mind 57
    7. Feedback Systems of the Brain and Mind 67
    8. Ethical Issues Relating to the Technology of Neuronal Interfaces 84
  5. Chapter 5. Cyberneuroethics 99
    1. General Ethical Considerations Relating to Neuronal Interfaces 101
    2. Online Humans 106
    3. Changing Cognition 113
    4. Changing Consciousness 131
    5. Escaping Reality 135
    6. Changing Mood 140
    7. Changing Personality 142
    8. Changing Identity 144
    9. The Concept of Humanity 154
    10. Uploading a Mind 167
    11. Issues of Privacy 184
  6. Chapter 6. Neuronal Interfaces and Policy 217
    1. New Cybercrimes 218
    2. Policy Concerns 223
    3. Conclusion 229
    4. Human Autonomy 232
    5. Resistance to Such a Development 234
    6. Risks of Neuronal Interfaces 234
    7. Appendix. Scottish Council on Human Bioethics Recommendations on
    8. Cyberneuroethics 239
    9. Glossary 244
    10. Index 251
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