biological basis
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2022 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bevyn Jarrott ◽  
Richard Head ◽  
Kirsty G. Pringle ◽  
Eugenie R. Lumbers ◽  
Jennifer H. Martin

Cell ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 185 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-3
Author(s):  
Conor Liston ◽  
Angela Roberts ◽  
Kafui Dzirasa ◽  
Dan Geschwind ◽  
Susanne E. Ahmari ◽  
...  

2022 ◽  
pp. 287-306

This chapter draws philosophical and ethical attention to the procedures for enhancing and reshaping of the human body and mind whose aim is not to heal but to increase functions and capabilities of the healthy body and mind and establishing life on a new non-biological basis. Completely enhancing cyborgization of social relations and the entire historical reality of scientific humanism and the domination of artificial intelligence over human intelligence will not be in the function of preservation of life of man but establishing partially or completely artificial beings which will not need their biological father.


Author(s):  
Lluís Puig ◽  
Antonio Costanzo ◽  
Ernesto J. Muñoz‐Elías ◽  
Maria Jazra ◽  
Sven Wegner ◽  
...  

Science ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 374 (6574) ◽  
pp. 1449-1450
Author(s):  
Erik Keimpema ◽  
Vincenzo Di Marzo ◽  
Tibor Harkany
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
pp. 103985622110481
Author(s):  
Brendan D Kelly

Objective: To provide an overview of specific aspects of historical and possible future trajectories of psychiatry. Conclusions: Psychiatric treatments alleviate suffering, promote physical health, and are associated with increased longevity. As the biological underpinnings of mental illnesses are slowly uncovered, they generally cease to be primarily part of psychiatry (e.g. epilepsy, anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis). If this process continues, the biological basis of all symptom-based ‘mental illnesses’ might be described, and psychiatry absorbed into neurology and other disciplines. This will be a positive development if it provides better treatment for mental illness and psychiatric symptoms in other conditions, which is psychiatry’s sole concern. Psychiatry’s own survival as a distinct discipline is irrelevant if other disciplines can do the job better, possibly in collaboration. Given the tiny impact of neuroscience on psychiatry to date, the disappearance of psychiatry is unlikely to occur anytime soon, if ever. It is possible that human psychological functioning and psychiatric suffering are sufficiently complex and changeable as to defy complete, fine-grained, neuroscientific explanation. This would leave a role for psychiatry indefinitely, treating the immensely disabling, biologically unexplained clusters of symptoms that we currently call ‘mental illnesses’, increasingly in collaboration with, or absorbed within, other disciplines in medicine.


2021 ◽  
pp. 101571
Author(s):  
Katie E. O’Brien ◽  
Natalie E. Riddell ◽  
F Xavier Gómez-Olivé ◽  
Dale E. Rae ◽  
Karine Scheuermaier ◽  
...  

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