Ruth Chadwick: Preface
Ruud ter Meulen, Ahmed Mohammed, and Wayne Hall: Editorial
List of Contributors
Part I: Introduction to the Volume
1: Ruud ter Meulen, Ahmed Mohammed, and Wayne Hall: Should we get
smarter by taking cognitive drugs? Towards a critical appraisal of
arguments and evidence in the debate on cognitive enhancement
2: Ruud ter Meulen: The ethical debate on human enhancement and
cognitive enhancement by way of biotechnologies
Part II: Risk and benefits of the use of neuropharmacological drugs
for cognitive enhancement
3: Reinoud de Jongh: Overclocking the brain? The potential and
limitations of Cognition-Enhancing Drugs
4: Charles Massie, Eric Yamga, and Brendon Boot: Neuro-enhancement:
a call for better evidence on safety and efficacy
5: Andreas Heinz and Sabine Müller: Exaggerating benefits and
downplaying risks in the debate on cognitive neuroenhancement
6: Ahmed Mohammed: The Effects of Modafinil on Creativity: Results
from a Randomized Controlled Trial
7: Ahmed Mohammed: Does modafinil improve cognitive functioning in
healthy individuals?
8: Priyanka P. Shah-Basak and Roy H. Hamilton: Cognitive
enhancement using noninvasive brain stimulation: weighing
opportunity, feasibility, and risk
9: Mark Attiah: The use of brain stimulation technology for
cognitive enhancement and the potential for addiction
10: Stephan Schleim and Boris B. Quednow: Debunking the ethical
neuroenhancement debate
Part III: Ethical, philosophical, legal and policy issues of
cognitive enhancement
11: Ralph Hertwig and Thomas Hills: The evolutionary limits of
enhancement
12: Alex McKeown: Enhancement and therapy: is it possible to draw a
line?
13: Maartje Schermer: On the argument that enhancement is
cheating
14: Dan Stein: Psychiatric nosology and cognitive enhancement
15: Heather Bradshaw-Martin: Will cognitive enhancement lead to
more well-being? The case of people with disabilities
16: Imogen Goold: The Legal Aspects of Cognitive Enhancement Legal
regulations on cognitive enhancement practices
17: Brad Partridge: Students and 'smart drugs': empirical research
can shed light on enhancement enthusiasm
18: Stephanie Bell, Jayne Lucke and Wayne Hall: Lessons for
enhancement form the history of cocaine and amphetamine use
19: Wayne Hall and John Strang: Drug policy and the public good:
evidence for effective interventions
Professor Ruud ter Meulen (1952) is psychologist and ethicist. He
was Professor and Director at the Institute for Bioethics and the
University of Maastricht in the Netherlands. In 2005 he was
appointed Chair for Ethics of Medicine and Director of the Centre
for ethics in Medicine at the University of Bristol. He has
directed a range of European projects in the field of biomedical
ethics. He was co-ordinator of the ENHANCE project, dealing with
the ethical,
philosophical and social issues of enhancement technologies. He was
also co-ordinator of the recently finished European EPOCH project
on the role of ethics in public policy-making on new
biotechnologies, with
enhancement as a case, and of the European SYBHEL project on the
ethical, legal and social issues of synthetic biology as applied to
human health. He has published about 150 articles, book chapters
and edited volumes on a range of topics in bioethics. Wayne Hall is
a Professor and Director of the Centre for Youth Substance Abuse
Research at the University of Queensland. He was formerly: an NHMRC
Australia Fellow in addiction neuroethics at the University of
Queensland Centre for Clinical
Research and the University of Queensland Brain Institute
(2009-2014); Professor of Public Health Policy, School of
Population Health, UQ (2005-2009); Director of the Office of Public
Policy and Ethics at
the Institute for Molecular Bioscience (2001-2005) at the
University of Queensland; and Director of the National Drug and
Alcohol Research Centre, UNSW (1994-2001). He has advised the World
Health Organization on: the health effects of cannabis use; the
effectiveness of drug substitution treatment; the contribution of
illicit drug use to the global burden of disease; and the ethical
implications of genetic and neuroscience research on addiction. Dr
Ahmed Dahir Mohamed is a registered
psychologist, neuroscientist and author. He was the recipient of
the Emerging Psychologist Award from the 2016 International
Congress of Psychology in Yokohama, Japan for his work on the
effects of mindfulness
in young people. He was formerly a post-doctoral fellow in
Developmental Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience at the School of
Psychology University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus. He obtained
his doctorate in Psychology from the University of Cambridge, where
the focus of his thesis was how to enhance cognition in young
people. Dr. Mohamed was a recognized DPhil student at the Oxford
Centre for Neuroethics, University of Oxford. In 2013, he was a
visiting neuroscience and ethics fellow at St
Cross College, University of Oxford. Dr. Mohamed holds a first
class honours degree in psychology from the University of Reading
and he became a full chartered member of the British Psychological
Society
in 2013 and elected associate fellow in 2015.
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