Annals of the University of Bucharest
  • Home
  • About the Journal
    • Indexing
    • Editorial Team
  • Submissions

Annals of the University of Bucharest

Philosophy series

Menu

Neurofeedback-Based Moral Enhancement and the Notion of Morality

February 6, 2024 by maria

Koji Tachibana

 

Abstract

Some skeptics question the very possibility of moral bioenhancement by arguing that if we lack a widely acceptable notion of morality, we will not be able to accept the use of a biotechnological technique as a tool for moral bioenhancement. I will examine this skepticism and argue that the assessment of moral bioenhancement does not require such a notion of morality. In particular, I will demonstrate that this skepticism can be neutralized in the case of recent neurofeedback techniques. This goal will be accomplished in four steps. First, I will draw an outline of the skepticism against the possibility of moral bioenhancement and point out that a long-lasting dispute among moral philosophers nourishes this skepticism. Second, I will survey recent neurofeedback techniques and outline their three features: the variety of the target human faculties, such as emotion, cognition, and behavior; the flexibility or personalizability of the target brain state; and the nonclinical application of neurofeedback techniques. Third, I will argue that, by virtue of these three unique features, neurofeedback techniques can be a tool for moral bioenhancement without
adopting any specific notion of morality. Fourth, I will examine the advantages and threats that neurofeedback-based moral enhancement may have. Finally, I will conclude that neurofeedback-based moral enhancement can become a new and promising tool for moral bioenhancement and requires further ethical investigations on its unique features.

AnnalsUnibuc-2017-02-06Tachibana

Posted in: Articles Tagged: decoded neurofeedback, moral bioenhancement, neurofeedback, notion of morality, real-time fMRI

Issues archive

  • Vol 71 No 2 (2022)
  • Vol 71 No 1 (2022)
  • Vol 70 No 2 (2021)
  • Vol 69 No 2 (2020)

Archive of the journal (1960-2003)

Previous editions of our journal may be read at the following online address.

 

Keywords

aesthetics Aristotle art Augustin autonomy becoming capitalism communism consciousness. cooperation culture cyborg Damasio democracy Descartes despair early modern philosophy Emotions ethics Feel to Know Foucault globalization Heidegger history identity ideology Kant Malebranche metaphysics Pascal person Philokalia philosophical counseling Plato politics posthumanism pragmatism reason Sartre self spirituality Subject transhumanism

Latest articles

  • Vol 73 no 1 (2024)
  • BULGAKOV AND THE JESUS PRAYER
  • LISTENING TO THE GROANING OF MOTHER EARTH. A CHALLENGE AND AN INVITATION TO MOVE BEYOND ECOLOGY, THROUGH ECOFILIA TO ECOSOPHY – THE NECESSITY FOR A RELEVANT SPIRITUALITY TODAY
  • THE SELF-AWARENESS OF “SPIRITUAL” IMAGISTIC PHILOSOPHY
  • THE BEAUTY – FIRST WAY OF KNOWING: SOME GENERAL OBSERVATIONS ON THE ROLE OF THE AESTHETIC IN ACCURATE COGNITION AND IN THE PRACTICE OF CHRISTIAN SPIRITUALITY

Copyright © 2025 Annals of the University of Bucharest.

Magazine WordPress Theme by themehall.com