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49Ethical Contexts for the Future of NeuroethicsAmerican Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 10 (3): 134-136. 2019.
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175Comparative political philosophy: Categorizing political philosophies using twelve archetypesMetaphilosophy 40 (5): 633-655. 2009.Abstract: Comparative political philosophy can be stimulated by imposing a categorization scheme on possible varieties of political philosophies. This article develops a categorization scheme using four essential features of political philosophies, resulting in twelve archetypal political philosophies. The four essential features selected are a political philosophy's views concerning human nature, the proper function of morality, the best form of society, and the highest responsibility of citize…Read more
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74Consideration of Context and Meanings of Neuro-Cognitive Enhancement: The Importance of a Principled, Internationally Capable NeuroethicsAmerican Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 10 (1): 48-49. 2019.
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51America’s Public Philosopher: Essays on Social Justice, Economics, Education, and the Future of Democracy by John DeweyReview of Metaphysics 74 (4): 622-624. 2021.
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52Animal Polis, or, Why Ethics Cannot Rule PoliticsEidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 4 (2): 162-165. 2020.Preview: /Review: Martha Nussbaum, The Cosmopolitan Tradition: A Noble but Flawed Ideal, 310 pages./ For decades Martha Nussbaum allied herself whole-heartedly with cosmopolitanism. No longer. She appealed at length to the righteousness of Stoic cosmopolitanism in past publications such as Cultivating Humanity in 1997. Now, according to The Cosmopolitan Tradition, that founding ideal cannot be right. She presently advocates what may be called “ethical nationalism” since no system of political in…Read more
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108Advancing neuroscience on the 21st century world stage: The need for - and structure of - an internationally-relevant neuroethicsEthics in Biology, Engineering and Medicine. forthcoming.
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72Reason, Reality, and Speculative Philosophy (review)Journal of Speculative Philosophy 14 (4): 314-316. 2001.
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107Erratum to: A four-part working bibliography of neuroethics: Part 4 - Ethical issues in clinical and social applications of neurosciencePhilosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 12 2. 2017.Background As a discipline, neuroethics addresses a range of questions and issues generated by basic neuroscientific research, and its use and meanings in the clinical and social spheres. Here, we present Part 4 of a four-part bibliography of the neuroethics literature focusing on clinical and social applications of neuroscience, to include: the treatment-enhancement discourse; issues arising in neurology, psychiatry, and pain care; neuroethics education and training; neuroethics and the law; ne…Read more
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131Erratum to: A four-part working bibliography of neuroethics: Part 4 - Ethical issues in clinical and social applications of neurosciencePhilosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 2017 12:1 12 (1): 2. 2017.As a discipline, neuroethics addresses a range of questions and issues generated by basic neuroscientific research, and its use and meanings in the clinical and social spheres. Here, we present Part 4 of a four-part bibliography of the neuroethics literature focusing on clinical and social applications of neuroscience, to include: the treatment-enhancement discourse; issues arising in neurology, psychiatry, and pain care; neuroethics education and training; neuroethics and the law; neuroethics a…Read more
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152A four-part working bibliography of neuroethics: Part 4 - Ethical issues in clinical and social applications of neurosciencePhilosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 12 1. 2017.BackgroundAs a discipline, neuroethics addresses a range of questions and issues generated by basic neuroscientific research, and its use and meanings in the clinical and social spheres. Here, we present Part 4 of a four-part bibliography of the neuroethics literature focusing on clinical and social applications of neuroscience, to include: the treatment-enhancement discourse; issues arising in neurology, psychiatry, and pain care; neuroethics education and training; neuroethics and the law; neu…Read more
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137Neuroethics and the Possible Types of Moral EnhancementAmerican Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 3 (4): 3-14. 2012.Techniques for achieving moral enhancement will modify brain processes to produce what is alleged to be more moral conduct. Neurophilosophy and neuroethics must ponder what “moral enhancement” could possibly be, if possible at all. Objections to the very possibility of moral enhancement, raised from various philosophical and neuroscientific standpoints, fail to justify skepticism, but they do place serious constraints on the kinds of efficacious moral enhancers. While there won't be a “morality …Read more
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82Moral Enhancement? Acknowledging Limitations of Neurotechnology and MoralityAmerican Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 7 (2): 118-120. 2016.
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67Is Moral Enhancement a Right, or a Threat to Rights?Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 83 209-231. 2018.Enhancements for morality could become technologically practical at the expense of becoming unethical and uncivil. A mode of moral enhancement intensifying a person's imposition of conformity upon others, labeled here as “moral righteousness”, is particularly problematic. Moral energies contrary to expansions of civil rights and liberties can drown out reasoned justifications for equality and freedom, delaying social progress. The technological capacity of moral righteousness in the hands of a m…Read more
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Is Moral Enhancement a Right, or a Threat to Rights?In Michael Hauskeller & Lewis Coyne (eds.), Moral Enhancement: Critical Perspectives, Cambridge University Press. 2018.
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153DBS Think Tank IX was held on August 25–27, 2021 in Orlando FL with US based participants largely in person and overseas participants joining by video conferencing technology. The DBS Think Tank was founded in 2012 and provides an open platform where clinicians, engineers and researchers can freely discuss current and emerging deep brain stimulation technologies as well as the logistical and ethical issues facing the field. The consensus among the DBS Think Tank IX speakers was that DBS expanded…Read more
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54Panentheism and Peirce's GodPhilosophy, Theology and the Sciences 3 (1): 8-31. 2016.As Charles Peirce developed his pragmatic methodology and metaphysical cosmology, he also explored philosophical views about religion and God. Religion and science could be reconciled, he judged, if inquiries into God applied his scientific philosophy. Peirce died before clarifying what a Peircean God is like, but cooperation between theology, philosophy, and cosmology should pursue this effort. Core components of Peirces system are used to formulate theistic, pantheistic, and panentheistic cand…Read more
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87Neuroethics beyond NormalCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 25 (1): 121-140. 2016.Abstract:An integrated and principled neuroethics offers ethical guidelines able to transcend conventional and medical reliance on normality standards. Elsewhere we have proposed four principles for wise guidance on human transformations. Principles like these are already urgently needed, as bio- and cyberenhancements are rapidly emerging. Context matters. Neither “treatments” nor “enhancements” are objectively identifiable apart from performance expectations, social contexts, and civic orders. …Read more
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96God’s Divinely Justified Knowledge is Incompatible with Human Free WillForum Philosophicum: International Journal for Philosophy 15 (1): 141-159. 2010.A new version of the incompatibilist argument is developed. Knowledge is justified true belief. If God’s divine knowledge must be justified knowledge, then humans cannot have the “alternative possibilities” type of free will. This incompatibilist argument is immunized against the application of the hard-soft fact distinction. If divine knowledge is justified, then the only kind of facts that God can know are hard facts, permitting this incompatibilist argument to succeed.
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85Abduction, the Logic of Scientific Creativity, and Scientific RealismIn John R. Shook & Sami Paavola (eds.), Abduction in Cognition and Action: Logical Reasoning, Scientific Inquiry, and Social Practice, Springer Verlag. pp. 207-227. 2021.A fundamental question for philosophy of science asks, How is knowledge of the world created? A pragmatist approach is constructed to show how discovery and justification are tightly related during the creation of scientific knowledge. Procedural abduction, at the scientific level of Strict Abduction and higher, integrates the learnable and the logical quite thoroughly. Discovery and justification are functionally fused together within the organized process of procedural abduction by scientific …Read more
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128A principled and cosmopolitan neuroethics: considerations for international relevancePhilosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 9 1. 2014.Neuroethics applies cognitive neuroscience for prescribing alterations to conceptions of self and society, and for prescriptively judging the ethical applications of neurotechnologies. Plentiful normative premises are available to ground such prescriptivity, however prescriptive neuroethics may remain fragmented by social conventions, cultural ideologies, and ethical theories. Herein we offer that an objectively principled neuroethics for international relevance requires a new meta-ethics: under…Read more
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31Abduction, Complex Inferences, and Emergent Heuristics of Scientific InquiryIn John R. Shook & Sami Paavola (eds.), Abduction in Cognition and Action: Logical Reasoning, Scientific Inquiry, and Social Practice, Springer Verlag. pp. 177-206. 2021.The roles of abductive inference in dynamic heuristics allows scientific methodologies to test novel explanations for the world’s ways. Deliberate reasoning often follows abductive patterns, as well as patterns dominated by deduction and induction, but complex mixtures of these three modes of inference are crucial for scientific explanation. All possible mixed inferences are formulated and categorized using a novel typology and nomenclature. Twenty five possible combinations among abduction, ind…Read more
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IntroductionIn John R. Shook & Tibor Solymosi (eds.), Pragmatist Neurophilosophy: American Philosophy and the Brain, Bloomsbury Academic. 2014.
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The Self as an Evolved Organism that Lives in a Pragmatically Defined World / David L. Thompson - 11. Is Experience Subjective or Objective, or Both, or Neither?In John R. Shook & Tibor Solymosi (eds.), Pragmatist Neurophilosophy: American Philosophy and the Brain, Bloomsbury Academic. 2014.
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27Collected Works Of Addison W. MooreThoemmes. 2002.After John Dewey, Addison W. Moore was recognized as the chief spokesman for the instrumentalist version of pragmatism. Never before available, this complete collection of Moore's work contains dozens of philosophical articles, essays, book reviews, writings by other philosophers, and reviews of his work, together with his book, Pragmatism and its Critics (1910).
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37PragmatismMIT Press. 2023.A concise, reader-friendly overview of pragmatism, the most influential school of American philosophical thought.
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45Systematic Atheology: Atheism’s Reasoning with TheologyRoutledge. 2017.Atheology is the intellectual effort to understand atheism, defend the reasonableness of unbelief, and support nonbelievers in their encounters with religion. This book presents a historical overview of the development of atheology from ancient thought to the present day. It offers in-depth examinations of four distinctive schools of atheological thought: rationalist atheology, scientific atheology, moral atheology, and civic atheology. John R. Shook shows how a familiarity with atheology's comp…Read more
Buffalo, New York, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
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| Pragmatism |
| Neuroethics |
| Moral Psychology |
| Naturalism |
| General Philosophy of Science |
| History of Science |
| Philosophy of Religion |
| History of Western Philosophy |