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Neurobiology of Human Values / edited by Jean-Pierre Changeux, Antonio R. Damasio, Wolf Singer, Yves Christen.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries Research and Perspectives in NeurosciencesEditor: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2005Descripción: xv, 159 páginas recurso en líneaTipo de contenido:
  • texto
Tipo de medio:
  • computadora
Tipo de portador:
  • recurso en línea
ISBN:
  • 9783540298038
Formatos físicos adicionales: Edición impresa:: Sin títuloClasificación LoC:
  • RC321-580
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
Creation, Art, and the Brain -- Did Evolution Fix Human Values? -- Homo homini lupus? Morality, the Social Instincts, and our Fellow Primates -- Disorders of Social Conduct Following Damage to Prefrontal Cortices -- The Neurobiological Grounding of Human Values -- Emotion and Cognition in Moral Judgment: Evidence from Neuroimaging -- Neural substrates of affective style and value -- Cognitive Psychology of Moral Intuitions -- Mirror neuron: a neurological approach to empathy -- How does the brain know when it is right? -- Cerebral basis of human errors -- How a Primate Brain Comes to Know Some Mathematical Truths.
Resumen: Man has been pondering for centuries over the basis of his own ethical and aesthetic values. Until recent times, such issues were primarily fed by the thinking of philosophers, moralists and theologists, or by the findings of historians or sociologists relating to universality or variations in these values within various populations. Science has avoided this field of investigation within the confines of philosophy. Beyond the temptation to stay away from the field of knowledge science may also have felt itself unconcerned by the study of human values for a simple heuristic reason, namely the lack of tools allowing objective study. For the same reason, researchers tended to avoid the study of feelings or consciousness until, over the past two decades, this became a focus of interest for many neuroscientists. It is apparent that many questions linked to research in the field of neuroscience are now arising. The hope is that this book will help to formulate them more clearly rather than skirting them. The authors do not wish to launch a new moral philosophy, but simply to gather objective knowledge for reflection.
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Springer eBooks

Creation, Art, and the Brain -- Did Evolution Fix Human Values? -- Homo homini lupus? Morality, the Social Instincts, and our Fellow Primates -- Disorders of Social Conduct Following Damage to Prefrontal Cortices -- The Neurobiological Grounding of Human Values -- Emotion and Cognition in Moral Judgment: Evidence from Neuroimaging -- Neural substrates of affective style and value -- Cognitive Psychology of Moral Intuitions -- Mirror neuron: a neurological approach to empathy -- How does the brain know when it is right? -- Cerebral basis of human errors -- How a Primate Brain Comes to Know Some Mathematical Truths.

Man has been pondering for centuries over the basis of his own ethical and aesthetic values. Until recent times, such issues were primarily fed by the thinking of philosophers, moralists and theologists, or by the findings of historians or sociologists relating to universality or variations in these values within various populations. Science has avoided this field of investigation within the confines of philosophy. Beyond the temptation to stay away from the field of knowledge science may also have felt itself unconcerned by the study of human values for a simple heuristic reason, namely the lack of tools allowing objective study. For the same reason, researchers tended to avoid the study of feelings or consciousness until, over the past two decades, this became a focus of interest for many neuroscientists. It is apparent that many questions linked to research in the field of neuroscience are now arising. The hope is that this book will help to formulate them more clearly rather than skirting them. The authors do not wish to launch a new moral philosophy, but simply to gather objective knowledge for reflection.

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