1. Defining Right and Wrong in Brain Science, Essential Readings in Neuroethics, Walter G. Glannon, Ph.D. Editor
The fifth volume in The Dana Foundation Series on Neuroethics, this collection marks the five-year anniversary of the first meeting in the field of neuroethics, providing readers with the seminal writings on past, present, and future ethical issues facing neuroscience and society. (July, 2007)
Cloth • 350 pp. • ISBN-13: 978-1-932594-25-6 • $15.95
2. Hard Science, Hard Choices: Facts, Ethics, and Policies Guiding Brain Science Today by Sandra J. Ackerman
Top scholars and scientists discuss new and complex medical and social ethics brought about by advances in neuroscience. Based on an invitational meeting co-sponsored by the Library of Congress, the National Institutes of Health, the Columbia University Center for Bioethics, and the Dana Foundation. (October, 2001)
Paper • 152 pp. • ISBN-13: 1-932594-02-7 • $12.95
3. Neuroscience and the Law: Brain, Mind and the Scales of Justice, Brent S. Garland, Editor
How discoveries in neuroscience influence criminal and civil justice, based on an invitational meeting of 26 top neuroscientists, legal scholars, attorneys, and state and federal judges convened by the Dana Foundation and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. (September, 2004)
Paper • 226 pp. • ISBN-13: 1-932594-04-3 • $8.95
4. Neuroethics: Mapping the Field, Steven J. Marcus, Editor
Proceedings of the landmark 2002 conference organized by Stanford University and the University of California, San Francisco, and sponsored by The Dana Foundation, at which more than 150 neuroscientists, bioethicists, psychiatrists and psychologists, philosophers, and professors of law and public policy debated the ethical implications of neuroscience research findings. 50 illustrations. (November, 2002)
Paper 367 • pp. • ISBN-13: 978-0972383-00-4 • $10.95
5. Beyond Therapy: Biotechnology and the Pursuit of Happiness--A Report of the President's Council on Bioethics, Special foreword by Leon R. Kass,
Introduction by William Safire
Can biotechnology satisfy human desires for better children, superior performance, ageless bodies, and happy souls? This report says these possibilities present us with profound ethical challenges and choices. Includes dissenting commentary by scientist members of the Council. (December, 2003)
Paper 376 • pp. ISBN-13: 978-1-932594-05-8 • $10.95
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