Anphicon 1: Cognitive Enhancement and Other Technologies of the Mind
9th & 10th January, 2013, Watershed Bristol & Centre for Ethics in Medicine, University of Bristol
Click Here for Final Conference Programme. See Below For More Info
Official Registration for the Anphicon 1 Conference has now closed. If you would like to attend but have not yet registered please contact Dr Sylvie Allouche at allouche.sylvie@gmail.com
Registration still open for 'Should Students Take Smart Drugs?' Public Debate
9 Jan Watershed, Bristol 18:30-19:45
The aim of the Anphicon (Anthropotech + Philosophy) conferences is to explore the fundamental philosophical and ethical issues that are at stake in the debates surrounding technological alteration of the human body for the purposes of augmenting existing capacities, introducing new ones, or aesthetically improving the body - anthropotech.
Anphicon 1 approaches these questions through the lens of 'cognitive enhancement and other technologies of the mind'. The goal is to take a critical perspective towards both the concepts of enhancement and cognition, asking questions such as:
The conference also aims to address questions concerning:
These and others are the questions that we hope to address at Anphicon 1.
The Anphicon conferences are part of a wider collaboration between UWE Philosophy and the Centre for Ethics in Medicine (University of Bristol) that aims to explore the various philosophical and ethical dimensions of anthropotech. Anphicon 1 is sponsored by UWE's SPUR3 Early Career Researcher grant programme, the UWE Applied Philosophy Research Group, the Royal Institute of Philosophy and the Centre for Ethics in Medicine at the University of Bristol.
Organising Committee: Darian Meacham (UWE), Sylvie Allouche (UoB), Alex McKeown (UoB), Ruud ter Meulen (UoB), Heather Bradshaw (UoB).
Confirmed guest speakers: Jean-Michel Besnier (Paris), Jerome Goffette (Lyon), Michael Hauskeller (Exeter), Robin Mackenzie (Canterbury), David Roden (Bristol). More to follow.
Hotels: Both the Washington Hotel and Bristol YHA Youth Hostel are affordable and well-placed for the conference.
Map: Please click this link for location details of the two conference sites and relevant transport links.
For further information please contact Sylvie Allouche
Anphicon 1 approaches these questions through the lens of 'cognitive enhancement and other technologies of the mind'. The goal is to take a critical perspective towards both the concepts of enhancement and cognition, asking questions such as:
- Is cognition too narrow a frame to think about the technological alteration of the mind?
- How value-loaded is the term 'enhancement'?
- What are we talking about enhancing when we talk about 'cognitive enhancement' and for what purposes?
- What methodology serves to best investigate technological intervention into the body that results in alteration of conscious experience?
- What are the relations between cognition, emotion, memory and will? And how do these relations impact on the debate over 'cognitive enhancement'?
The conference also aims to address questions concerning:
- Justice and fairness in the technological alteration of intellectual and affective capacities
- The importance of neurodiversity and whether it is threatened by 'cognitive enhancement'
- The concept of neuro-ecology or ecology of the mind
These and others are the questions that we hope to address at Anphicon 1.
The Anphicon conferences are part of a wider collaboration between UWE Philosophy and the Centre for Ethics in Medicine (University of Bristol) that aims to explore the various philosophical and ethical dimensions of anthropotech. Anphicon 1 is sponsored by UWE's SPUR3 Early Career Researcher grant programme, the UWE Applied Philosophy Research Group, the Royal Institute of Philosophy and the Centre for Ethics in Medicine at the University of Bristol.
Organising Committee: Darian Meacham (UWE), Sylvie Allouche (UoB), Alex McKeown (UoB), Ruud ter Meulen (UoB), Heather Bradshaw (UoB).
Confirmed guest speakers: Jean-Michel Besnier (Paris), Jerome Goffette (Lyon), Michael Hauskeller (Exeter), Robin Mackenzie (Canterbury), David Roden (Bristol). More to follow.
Hotels: Both the Washington Hotel and Bristol YHA Youth Hostel are affordable and well-placed for the conference.
Map: Please click this link for location details of the two conference sites and relevant transport links.
For further information please contact Sylvie Allouche