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Home >  Events >  The New Neuromorality
The New Neuromorality
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W. H. Brady Program in Culture and Freedom Conference
Start:  Wednesday, June 1, 2005  10:15 AM
End:  Wednesday, June 1, 2005  3:00 PM
Location:  Wohlstetter Conference Center, Twelfth Floor, AEI
1150 Seventeenth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036
Directions to AEI

What do recent findings in neuroscience tell us about the ability of people to make moral judgments or reasoned decisions? Advances in neuroscience are being used by advocates to guide public policy on a broad range of moral and ethical issues. Is this new approach really a step forward? This year, the Supreme Court heard arguments about whether developments in neurology and our understanding of brain function should affect the constitutionality of executing 16- and 17-year-olds who commit murder. New neurological findings are now being applied to a wide range of issues—drug addiction, obesity, pornography, "lie detection," unconscious racial bias, even shopping and marketing. While there is no disputing the reality of activity patterns in the brain, the moral inferences and policy arguments being derived from our growing neurobiological knowledge raise profound questions about the nature of individual responsibility.

The first panel of this conference will address current claims of new neurotechnologies. Is there a link between neurobiology and social problems such as addiction, criminology, and social psychology? The second panel will discuss legal and moral agency issues that arise out of this new neuroscience. Does this new science undermine the concept of free will? What are the ethical problems raised by our growing understanding of the neural biology of behavior, personality, and consciousness? How is neuroscience being used in the courtroom today? What impact will these discoveries have on our legal system?

10:00 a.m.

Registration

     
10:15 Panel I: The New Neuroscience: What Can Modern Mechanistic Advances Tell Us About Human Behavior?
  Moderator: Charles Murray, AEI
  Panelists:  Martha Farah, University of Pennsylvania
Hank Greely, Stanford University
Sally Satel, AEI
Philip Tetlock, University of California at Berkeley
Thomas Zeffiro, Georgetown University
Noon Luncheon
12:30 p.m. Luncheon Keynote: The Concept of Responsibility in the Age of Cognitive Neuroscience
  Speaker: Steven Pinker, Johnstone Family Professor in the department of psychology, Harvard University (author, The Blank Slate, The Language Instinct)
1:30 Panel II: Legal and Moral Implications of the New Neuroscience 
Moderator:  Christina Hoff Sommers, AEI
  Panelists: Joshua Greene, Princeton University
Stephen Morse, University of Pennsylvania School of Law
Steven Pinker, Harvard University
     
3:00

Adjournment


More Information
Nell Manning
American Enterprise Institute
 1150 Seventeenth Street, N.W.
Washington, DC  20036
Phone: 202-828-6024
Fax: 202-862-7178
E-mail: nmanning@aei.org

Media Inquiries
Veronique Rodman
American Enterprise Institute
 1150 Seventeenth Street, N.W.
Washington, DC  20036
Phone: 202-862-4870
E-mail: VRodman@aei.org
AEI Print Index No. 18534


Event Materials
  Summary
  Video
Related Material
Speaker biographies
Farah's paper  
Satel's paper  
Tetlock's paper  
Pinker's paper  
Morse's paper  
Greene's paper  
Zeffiro's presentation  
Satel's presentation  
Tetlock's presentation  
Farah's presentation  
Greene's presentation  
Related Links
About the Brady Program