Investigational, conceptual, and interventional advances in the neurosciences strain consensus in research ethics, clinical ethics, legal ethics, and jurisprudence and demand innovative adaptation in public policy. I review these advances, ask how they might change a range of policies, and conclude that their implications — particularly relating to aggression — are likely to have been underestimated.
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1 March 2005
The brain, aggression, and public policy
Robert H. Blank
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Politics and the Life Sciences
Vol. 24 • No. 1
March 2005
Vol. 24 • No. 1
March 2005