Adina L. Roskies
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Adina L. Roskiesphilosophy Degrees
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Ethics
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#1405
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Philosophy
Adina L. Roskies's Degrees
- Bachelors Philosophy Brown University
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Why Is Adina L. Roskies Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Adina L. Roskies is an American philosopher and the Helman Family Distinguished Professor at Dartmouth College. She is known for her works on neuroethics, neuroscience of free will and epiphenomenalism. Roskies was Senior Editor of the journal Neuron.
Adina L. Roskies's Published Works
Published Works
- Neuroethics for the New Millenium (2002) (332)
- Topographic-Specific Axon Branching Controlled by Ephrin-As Is the Critical Event in Retinotectal Map Development (2001) (222)
- The Binding Problem (1999) (206)
- Neuroscientific challenges to free will and responsibility (2006) (182)
- Are ethical judgments intrinsically motivational? Lessons from "acquired sociopathy" [1] (2003) (129)
- Control of topographic retinal axon branching by inhibitory membrane-bound molecules. (1994) (118)
- Neuroimages as Evidence in a Mens Rea Defense: No Impact (2011) (108)
- How does neuroscience affect our conception of volition? (2010) (101)
- Neuroimaging and Inferential Distance (2008) (97)
- Bringing moral responsibility down to earth (2008) (93)
- Are Neuroimages Like Photographs of the Brain? (2007) (82)
- Barking up the wrong free: readiness potentials reflect processes independent of conscious will (2013) (56)
- A primer on criminal law and neuroscience : a contribution of the law and neuroscience project, supported by the MacArthur Foundation (2013) (51)
- Plasticity in the development of topographic order in the mammalian retinocollicular projection. (1994) (49)
- Readiness potentials driven by non-motoric processes (2016) (49)
- Why Libet’s Studies Don’t Pose a Threat to Free Will (2010) (44)
- Mapping memory with positron emission tomography. (1994) (42)
- Brain Images as Legal Evidence (2008) (40)
- Mechanisms and molecules controlling the development of retinal maps. (1995) (39)
- Neuroimages in court: less biasing than feared (2013) (36)
- A New Argument for Nonconceptual Content (2008) (34)
- The Neurobiology of Decision-Making and Responsibility: Reconciling Mechanism and Mindedness (2012) (30)
- Patients With Ventromedial Frontal Damage Have Moral Beliefs (2006) (29)
- Saving Subtraction: A reply to Van Orden and Paap (2010) (27)
- Brain‐Mind and Structure‐Function Relationships: A Methodological Response to Coltheart (2009) (25)
- Hypnotizing Libet: Readiness potentials with non-conscious volition (2015) (23)
- What Is the Readiness Potential? (2021) (23)
- How does the neuroscience of decision making bear on our understanding of moral responsibility and free will? (2012) (19)
- A case study of neuroethics: the nature of moral judgment (2004) (19)
- Brain Imaging Techniques (2013) (17)
- DON’T PANIC: SELF‐AUTHORSHIP WITHOUT OBSCURE METAPHYSICS (2012) (17)
- Neuroimaging and Inferential Distance: The Perils of Pictures (2010) (16)
- Commentary Neuroethics for the New Millenium What's in a Name? as with All Newborns, Picking a Name Is a Difficult and Contentious Task. One of the Most Animated Debates At (2002) (15)
- A Strawsonian look at desert (2013) (14)
- Can Neuroscience Resolve Issues about Free Will (2014) (13)
- Representational similarity analysis in neuroimaging: proxy vehicles and provisional representations (2021) (12)
- ‘That’ Response doesn't Work: Against a Demonstrative Defense of Conceptualism (2010) (12)
- A Puzzle about Empathy (2011) (11)
- Neuroethics beyond genethics (2007) (10)
- Brains, lies, and psychological explanations (2009) (10)
- Dissecting Semaphorin Signaling (1998) (10)
- ROBUSTNESS AND THE NEW RIDDLE REVIVED (2008) (9)
- Decision-Making and Self-Governing Systems (2018) (8)
- The Illusion of Personhood (2007) (8)
- Freedom, Neural Mechanism, and Consciousness (2010) (8)
- Agency and intervention (2015) (8)
- Mind Reading, Lie Detection, and Privacy (2015) (8)
- Brain Images as Evidence in the Criminal Law (2011) (7)
- Cinema 1-2-Many of the Mind (1992) (7)
- Monkey Decision Making as a Model System for Human Decision Making (2014) (7)
- What's “Neu” in Neuroethics? (2009) (7)
- “Local determination”, even if we could find it, does not challenge free will: Commentary on Marcelo Fischborn (2017) (7)
- Davidson on Believers: Can Non-Linguistic Creatures Have Propositional Attitudes? (2014) (5)
- Response to Sie and Wouters: A neuroscientific challenge to free will and responsibility? (2008) (5)
- The Neuroscience of Volition (2013) (4)
- 11 Dissecting the Readiness Potential An Investigation of the Relationship between Readiness Potentials , Conscious Willing , and Action (2014) (4)
- Philosophy of Neuroscience (2016) (4)
- Barking up the wrong free: readiness potentials reflect processes independent of conscious will (2013) (3)
- 4. Triangulation and Objectivity: Squaring the Circle? (2011) (3)
- Visualizing human brain function (2001) (3)
- Seeing truth or just seeming true? (1990) (2)
- Free will without consciousness? (2022) (2)
- We Are Borg (2005) (2)
- Dissecting the Readiness Potential (2014) (2)
- Everyday neuromorality. (2004) (2)
- New NIH Regulations Say Most Basic Human Brain Research Is a Clinical Trial (2017) (2)
- Thought, Language, and Inner Speech (2014) (2)
- Other Neuroscientific Techniques (2013) (1)
- Can the Law Do Without Retributivism? Comments on Erin Kelly’s The Limits of Blame (2020) (1)
- Neuroscience and The Law (2013) (1)
- ALFRED R. MELE'S EFFECTIVE INTENTIONS: THE POWER OF CONSCIOUS WILL (2010) (1)
- Neuroethics: Considering Its Scope and Limits (2010) (1)
- Yes, but am I free? (2001) (1)
- Memory Deletion Threatens Authenticity by Destabilizing Values (2021) (1)
- Neuroethics in the Shadow of a Pandemic (2020) (1)
- Moral Status or Moral Value? The Former May Require Phenomenal Consciousness, But Does It Matter? (2023) (0)
- Introduction to Cognitive Neuroscience (2022) (0)
- What is it like to speed date? (2006) (0)
- Visually-evoked readiness potentials reflect anticipation and/or preparation of future movements rather than acts of will (2011) (0)
- Neuroethics Fifteen Years On (2019) (0)
- CALL FOR PAPERS (2011) (0)
- Adina L. Roskies (2014) (0)
- Enzo and Me : essay concerning the mental lives of humans and other animals (2004) (0)
- Science and the quest for wisdom (2010) (0)
- Self-consciousness and "Split" Brains: The Mind's I by Elizabeth Schechter (review) (2020) (0)
- The Two Greatest Ideas: How Our Grasp of the Universe and Our Minds Changed Everything by Linda Trinkaus Zagzebski (review) (2022) (0)
- RECENT AND RELEVANT (2013) (0)
- Decision-Making and Self-Governing Systems (2016) (0)
- A PARLIAMENT OF THE MIND (1992) (0)
- Book Review: The Ethics of Uncertainty: Entangled ethical and epistemic risks in disorders of consciousnessJohnson, L. Syd M.Oxford: OUP, 2022. 284pp. ISBN 9780190943646. $90. (Hardback). (2022) (0)
- Philosophy FSP: Evolution and its Challenges Fall 2009 (2009) (0)
- Consciousness and End of Life Ethical Issues (2018) (0)
- Neuroethics: The origins of morality (2011) (0)
- OF ETHICS : THE STATE OF ART AND THE PROMISES FOR THE FUTURE (2011) (0)
- Mind Reading , Lie Detection , and Privacy 42 (2014) (0)
- Rationalization and the status of folk psychology (2020) (0)
- Dimensions of Agency: Conceptual and Data-Driven Approaches (2021) (0)
- Frankfurt and the Problem of Self-Control (2020) (0)
- Philosophical Abstracts (2020) (0)
- Can the Law Do Without Retributivism? Comments on Erin Kelly’s The Limits of Blame (2020) (0)
- Neuroimaging Neuroethics: Introduction (2015) (0)
- What is the Intention to Move and When Does it Occur? (2023) (0)
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