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This volume focuses on the emergent field of neuroethics comparing
and contrasting how two democracies, Canada and the United States,
have begun adapting public policy design to better fit human minds.
The book focuses on issues relevant to all members of the general
population and discusses a series of policy issues arranged roughly
in the order in which they become relevant in a typical person's
lifetime. After the introductory chapter each chapter considers an
area of public policy particularly relevant to a different stage of
life-from early childhood education policy, to policies for higher
education and the workplace, to end of life decisions in living
wills and advance directives. The author puts forth that making the
shift towards more neurologically appropriate policy will likely be
a gradual process hampered primarily by two issues. The first is
the inability of neuroscientists to come to agreement on
increasingly sophisticated research findings. The second issue
points out that bringing policy and neurology into a more
synchronous relationship requires a commitment to prolonged effort
involves the largely unrecognized reality of entrenched
neurological interests. The first chapter introduces the concept of
disconnect between policy design with traditional understandings of
the brain and goes on to highlight developments in the science of
human neurology in recent years. To help contextualize the book,
examples of neurological misperceptions are explored in this
introductory chapter. Chapters Two through Eleven each explores a
specific type of policy, incorporating understandings of the human
brain which, modern neuroscience suggests, are debatable.
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