Critical Neuroscience: A Handbook of the Social and Cultural Contexts of Neuroscience brings together multi-disciplinary scholars from around the world to explore key social, historical and philosophical studies of neuroscience, and to analyze the socio-cultural implications of recent advances in the field. This text's original, interdisciplinary approach explores the creative potential for engaging experimental neuroscience with social studies of neuroscience while furthering the dialogue between neuroscience and the disciplines of the social sciences and humanities. Critical Neuroscience…mehr
Critical Neuroscience: A Handbook of the Social and Cultural Contexts of Neuroscience brings together multi-disciplinary scholars from around the world to explore key social, historical and philosophical studies of neuroscience, and to analyze the socio-cultural implications of recent advances in the field. This text's original, interdisciplinary approach explores the creative potential for engaging experimental neuroscience with social studies of neuroscience while furthering the dialogue between neuroscience and the disciplines of the social sciences and humanities. Critical Neuroscience transcends traditional skepticism, introducing novel ideas about 'how to be critical' in and about science.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Suparna Choudhury is Junior Professor at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science and the Berlin Institute for Mind and Brain, Humboldt University, Germany. Her research examines the emergence of the 'neurological adolescent'. She has also published on cultural neuroscience and topics at the intersection of neuroscience and society. Jan Slaby is Junior Professor in Philosophy of Mind and Emotion at Free University Berlin, Germany. The author of a German-language book exploring the world-disclosing nature of human emotions, he has also been involved in research and teaching on the philosophy of psychiatry, with a particular focus on affective disorders and background feelings.
Inhaltsangabe
Part I - Motivations and Foundations. Chapter 1: Proposal for a Critical Neuroscience (Jan Slaby and Suparna Choudhury). Chapter 2: The Need for a Critical Neuroscience: From Neuroideology to Neurotechnology (Steven Rose). Chapter 3: Against First Nature: Critical Theory and Neuroscience (Martin Hartmann). Chapter 4: Scanning the Lifeworld: Toward a Critical Neuroscience of Action and Interaction (Shaun Gallagher).
Part II - Histories of the Brain. Chapter 5: Toys are Us: Models and Metaphors in Brain Science (Cornelius Borck). Chapter 6: The Neuromance of Cerebral History (Max Stadler). Chapter 7: Empathic Cruelty and the Origins of the Social Brain (Allan Young).
Part III - Neuroscience in Context: From Laboratory to Lifeworld. Chapter 8: Disrupting Images: Neuroscientific Representations in the Lives of Psychiatric Patients (Simon Cohn). Chapter 9: Critically Producing Brain Images of Mind (Joseph Dumit). Chapter 10: Radical Reductions. Neurophysiology, Politics, and Personhood in Russian Addiction Medicine (Eugene Raikhel). Chapter 11: Delirious Brain Chemistry and Controlled Culture: Exploring the Contextual Mediation of Drug Effects (Nicolas Langlitz).
Part IV - Situating the brain in context: from lifeworld back to laboratory? Chapter 12: Critical Neuroscience: From Neuroimaging to Tea Leaves in the Bottom of a Cup (Amir Raz). Chapter 13: The Salmon of Doubt: Six Months of Methodological Controversy within Social Neuroscience (Daniel Margulies). Chapter 14: Cultural Neuroscience as Critical Neuroscience in Practice (Joan Y. Chiao and Bobby K. Cheon).
Part V - Beyond neural correlates: Ecological approaches to psychiatry. Chapter 15: Re-Socializing Psychiatry: Critical Neuroscience and the Limits of Reductionism (Laurence J. Kirmayer and Ian Gold). Chapter 16: Are Mental Illnesses Diseases of the Brain? (Thomas Fuchs). Chapter 17: Are There Neural Correlates of Depression? (Fernando Vidal and Francisco Ortega). Chapter 18: The Future of Critical Neuroscience (Laurence J. Kirmayer).
Part I - Motivations and Foundations. Chapter 1: Proposal for a Critical Neuroscience (Jan Slaby and Suparna Choudhury). Chapter 2: The Need for a Critical Neuroscience: From Neuroideology to Neurotechnology (Steven Rose). Chapter 3: Against First Nature: Critical Theory and Neuroscience (Martin Hartmann). Chapter 4: Scanning the Lifeworld: Toward a Critical Neuroscience of Action and Interaction (Shaun Gallagher).
Part II - Histories of the Brain. Chapter 5: Toys are Us: Models and Metaphors in Brain Science (Cornelius Borck). Chapter 6: The Neuromance of Cerebral History (Max Stadler). Chapter 7: Empathic Cruelty and the Origins of the Social Brain (Allan Young).
Part III - Neuroscience in Context: From Laboratory to Lifeworld. Chapter 8: Disrupting Images: Neuroscientific Representations in the Lives of Psychiatric Patients (Simon Cohn). Chapter 9: Critically Producing Brain Images of Mind (Joseph Dumit). Chapter 10: Radical Reductions. Neurophysiology, Politics, and Personhood in Russian Addiction Medicine (Eugene Raikhel). Chapter 11: Delirious Brain Chemistry and Controlled Culture: Exploring the Contextual Mediation of Drug Effects (Nicolas Langlitz).
Part IV - Situating the brain in context: from lifeworld back to laboratory? Chapter 12: Critical Neuroscience: From Neuroimaging to Tea Leaves in the Bottom of a Cup (Amir Raz). Chapter 13: The Salmon of Doubt: Six Months of Methodological Controversy within Social Neuroscience (Daniel Margulies). Chapter 14: Cultural Neuroscience as Critical Neuroscience in Practice (Joan Y. Chiao and Bobby K. Cheon).
Part V - Beyond neural correlates: Ecological approaches to psychiatry. Chapter 15: Re-Socializing Psychiatry: Critical Neuroscience and the Limits of Reductionism (Laurence J. Kirmayer and Ian Gold). Chapter 16: Are Mental Illnesses Diseases of the Brain? (Thomas Fuchs). Chapter 17: Are There Neural Correlates of Depression? (Fernando Vidal and Francisco Ortega). Chapter 18: The Future of Critical Neuroscience (Laurence J. Kirmayer).
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