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The ethics of consciousness

Part of the Elements in Bioethics and Neuroethics series
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This Element examines the main ethical aspects of consciousness  It argues that consciousness is not intrinsically valuable but has value or disvalue for individuals depending on its phenomenology (what it is like to be aware) and content (what one is aware of).

These two components of awareness shape normative judgments about how ordered, disordered, altered, restored, diminished and suppressed conscious states can benefit or harm individuals.

They also influence moral judgments about whether intentionally causing these states is permissible or impermissible and how these states can affect behavior.

After describing its neurobiological basis, this Element discusses ethical and legal issues in six categories of consciousness: phenomenal and access consciousness; intraoperative awareness; prolonged disorders of consciousness, dissociative disorders, the role of consciousness in determining death; and altering and suppressing awareness near the end of life.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1009078046 / 9781009078047
Paperback / softback
153
14/07/2022
United Kingdom
English
75 pages.
Print on demand edition.