Frontiers in Neuroscience (May 2023)

Studying Brains. What could neurometaphysics be to NeurotechEU?

  • Jan Bransen,
  • Jan Bransen,
  • Freek Oude Maatman,
  • Freek Oude Maatman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2023.1155547
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17

Abstract

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NeurotechEU has introduced a new conceptual hierarchy for neuroscientific research and its applications along 8 different core research areas, including the so-called ‘neurometaphysics’. This paper explores this concept of neurometaphysics, its topics and its potential approach. It warns against an endemic Cartesianism in (neuro)science that somehow seems to survive explicit refutations by implicitly persisting in our conceptual scheme. Two consequences of this persisting Cartesian legacy are discussed; the isolated brain assumption and the idea that activity requires identifiable neural ‘decisions’. Neuropragmatism is introduced as offering the promise of progress in neurometaphysics, by emphasizing that (1) studying brains interact organically with their environment and (2) studying brains requires an attitude of continuous learning.

Keywords