The discourse on “neurolaw” has recently expanded to include the potential recognition of “neurorights”, conceived as new fundamental rights aimed at protecting individuals from infringements on their mental or cerebral functioning.
Sonia Desmoulin
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Scratching the structure of moral agency: insights from philosophy applied to neuroscience. [PDF]
Castro-Toledo FJ +2 more
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The socio-cognitive perspective
This article explores the socio-cognitive perspective, emphasizing the necessity of interdisciplinarity in the social sciences. It critiques the fragmentation of academic disciplines, arguing that excessive specialization stifles innovation and prevents ...
Luigi Cominelli
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The United Nations convention on the rights of persons with disabilities, neuroscience, and criminal legal capacity. [PDF]
Barsky BA, Stein MA.
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A Critical Perspective on NeuroRights: Comments Regarding Ethics and Law. [PDF]
Borbón D, Borbón L.
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Out of their minds? Externalist challenges for using AI in forensic psychiatry. [PDF]
Starke G, D'Imperio A, Ienca M.
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Reimagining criminal accountability: microbial and omics perspectives in the evolution of legal responsibility. [PDF]
Mishra P, Logan AC, Prescott SL.
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Decisional brain of lawyers at the workplace. A neurolaw pilot study. [PDF]
Balconi M +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
Studying brains what could neurometaphysics be to NeurotechEU? [PDF]
Bransen J, Oude Maatman F.
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Cognitive frontiers: neurotechnology and global internet governance. [PDF]
Radu R.
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