Syllabus

Course Meeting Times

Lectures: 2 sessions / week, 1 hour / session

Recitations: 1 session / week, 1 hour / session

Course Overview

In recent decades, research in the field of neuroscience has spilled into the national media on a daily basis, suggesting new interventions and applications in social domains such as law, education, and economics, and challenging us to redefine our understandings of responsibility, choice, and what it is to be human.  In this class we will think critically about the relationship between neuroscience and society.  What are the ethical, legal, social, and policy implications of emerging neuroscience?  How does neuroscience reflect social attitudes and agendas, and how, in turn, does it reshape those attitudes and agendas?

To begin to answer these questions, the course will consider topics such as brain imaging and the popular media; the neuroscience of moral reasoning, empathy, and trust; the new fields of neuroeconomics and neuromarketing; the ethical implications of neurotechnologies such as cognitive enhancement pharmaceuticals; neuroscience in the courtroom; and the neuroscientific recasting of social problems such as addiction and violence. Guest lectures by researchers in the brain sciences, class discussion, and weekly readings that draw from science studies, popular media, and neuroscientific research.

Students are expected to attend class, read assigned materials carefully and thoughtfully, and participate in recitations. As a HASS-D/CI course, emphasis is placed on oral and written communication.

Lectures

There will be two one hour lectures per week. You must attend all the lectures. You may take notes on your laptops if you wish, but please refrain from email, internet surfing, and other such activities.

Readings

Readings are assigned for each lecture. Carefully read the assigned texts in advance of each class.

Recitations

Active participation in your assigned weekly recitation section is required. Students should come to every recitation meeting with a sentence from each reading that convinced or did not convince you (be prepared to discuss why), or with a question that each reading raised for you, pertaining to class themes. You may also bring any questions you have on the week's lectures. These sentences and questions will act as prompts for collective discussion on the readings and topic for that day. Unexcused absences from recitations will be penalized.

Presentations

In your recitation sections, each of you will give a formal presentation (10-15 minutes long) on the readings for a given day, and facilitate subsequent discussion.

Writing Assignments

HASS-CI (Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences - Communications Intensive) subjects require at least 20 pages of writing divided among a number of assignments, at least one of which is to be revised and resubmitted. In this class you will write two 6-8 page papers, and one 8-10 page final paper, for a minimum of 20 pages. You will revise and resubmit your first or second paper in consultation with your TA.

Grading

Grading will be evenly distributed:

ACTIVITIESPERCENTAGES
Section participation20%
Four written assignments (20% each)80%

Calendar

LEC #TOPICSKEY DATES
I. Framing the brain
1Introduction 
2Neuroscience in historical context I 
3Neuroscience in historical context II 
4

Picturing the brain (neuroimaging)

Guest lecture by Hans Breiter, MD, PhD, Massachusetts General Hospital

 
5Public circulation of brain images 
II. Making brains mean
6Computer as brain, brain as computer 
7Rational brain, impulsive brain 
8The moral brainPaper 1 due
9

The empathic brain (social neuroscience)

Guest lecture by Susan Lanzoni, PhD

 
10Finding god in the brain (Neurotheology) 
11The brain on love 
12Male and female brains 
13Homosexual brains 
III. Social problems: problematic brains
14The addicted brainPaper 2 due
15The stressed brain 
16

Prejudice in the brain?

Guest lecture by Emile Bruneau, PhD

 
17Violence in the brain? 
IV. Interventions
18

Brains on the stand

Guest lecture by Ruth Greenberg, Esq.

 
19

Crime and punishment

Guest lecture by Monty Brower, MD

 
20Disciplining the brainPaper 3 (rewrite) due
21Treating the brain 
22

Enhancing the brain

Guest lecture by Emily Wanderer, graduate student in MIT Science, Techology and Society

 
23The consumer brain 
24

Branding the brain (neuromarketing)

Guest speaker: Nate Greenslit, PhD

 
V. Conclusions: brave new neurosociety?
25Neuroethics 
26Final reflectionsPaper 4 due