Neuroscientists are mining nucleic acids, blood, saliva, and brain images in hopes of uncovering biomarkers that could help estimate risk of brain disorders like psychosis and dementia; though the science of bioprediction is young, its prospects are unearthing controversy about how bioprediction should enter hospitals, courtrooms, or state houses. While medicine, law, and policy have established protocols for how presence of disorders should change what we owe each other or who weblame, they have no stock answers for the probabilities that bioprediction offers. The Neuroethics of Biomarkers observes, however, that for many disorders, what we really care about is not their presence per se, but certain risks that they carry. The current reliance of moral and legal structures ona categorical concept of disorder (sick verses well), therefore, obscures difficult questions about what types and magnitudes of probabilities matter. Baum argues that progress in the neuroethics of biomarkers requires the rejection of the binary concept of disorder in favor of a probabilistic one based on biological variation with risk of harm, which Baum names a Probability Dysfunction. This risk-reorientation clarifies practical ethical issues surrounding the definition of mentaldisorder in the DSM-5 and the nosology of conditions defined by risk of psychosis and dementia. Baum also challenges the principle that the acceptability of bioprediction should depend primarily on whether it is medically useful by arguing that biomarkers can also be morally useful through enabling moralagency, better assessment of legal responsibility, and fairer distributive justice. The Neuroethics of Biomarkers should be of interest to those within neuroethics, medical ethics, and the philosophy of psychiatry.
Introduction; Chapter 1: The Biomedical Promise Of Biomarkers; Chapter 2: Bioprediction Of Brain Disorder: Definitions And Scope; PART I: REORIENTATION OF THE CONCEPT OF DISORDER; Chapter 3:There Is More Light Here. Re-Illuminating The Categories Of Mental; Chapter 4: The Probability Dysfunction; Chapter 5: The Practical Ethics Of Predictive Markers In Diagnosis: Can Risk Banding Address The Ethical Controversy Surrounding Psychosis Risk Syndrome And Preclinical Alzheimers Disease?; PART II: BIOPREDICTION AND MORAL RESPONSIBILITY; Chapter 6: Enhanced Responsibility: Foreseeability And New Obligations To Others; Chapter 7: Reduced Responsibility: Distinguishing Conditions In Which Biomarkers Properly Reduce Legal Responsibility; PART III: BIOPREDICTION AND SOCIETY; Chapter 8: Bioprediction And Priority; Conclusion; Appendix I; Appendix II; Appendix III; References; Index;
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