ABSTRACT

The past 20 years have seen increasingly bold claims emanating from the field of neuroscience. Advances in medical imaging, brain modelling, and interdisciplinary cognitive science have forced us to reconsider the nature of social, cultural, and political activities. This collection of essays is the first to explore the relationship between neuroscience and political theory, with a view to examining what connections can be made and which claims represent a bridge too far.

The book is divided into three parts:

  • Part I: places neuroscience as a social and political practice into historical context
  • Part II: weaves together the insights from contemporary neuroscience with the wisdom of major figures in the history of political thought
  • Part III: considers how neuroscience can inform contemporary debates about a range of issues in political theory

This work brings together scholars who are sceptical about the possibility of integrating neuroscience and political theory with proponents of a neuroscience-informed approach to thinking about political and social life. The result is a timely and wide-ranging collection of essays about the role that our brain might play in the life of the body politic. It should be essential reading for all those with an interest in the cutting edge of political theory.

chapter |22 pages

Introduction

part |82 pages

Neuroscience and Political Thinkers

chapter |21 pages

Brain Sculpting as Moral Practice

A Neuro-Aristotelian Approach

chapter |16 pages

Hobbes, Prudence, and Neuroscience

Early Modern Strategies for Negotiating Contemporary Subjectivity

chapter |22 pages

Think Big

Toward a Grand Neuropolitics – or, Why I am Not an Immanent Naturalist or Vital Materialist

part |89 pages

Issues in Neuroscience and Political Theory

chapter |21 pages

Does Deliberation make You Angry?

Neuroscience and Theories of Deliberative Democracy

chapter |27 pages

Bounded Mirroring

Joint Action and Group Membership in Political Theory and Cognitive Neuroscience