Associate Professor Neil Levy is an Australian Research Council Future Fellow at the Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health, Australia, as well as director of research at the Oxford Centre for Neuroethics, University of Oxford. He works on the philosophy of agency and ethical issues in neuroscience, as well as related areas, and has published extensively on these topics. He is the author of Neuroethics (Cambridge University Press, 2007) and Hard Luck (Oxford University Press, 2011) among other books and edits the journal Neuroethics.
This highly condensed, frank, and well-argued work is a must for anyone interested in moral psychology, morality considered at the neurophysiological level, and how consciousness studies can apply to other disciplines and concerns and to our understanding of ourselves as Homo sapiens Lantz Miller, Journal of Consciousness Studies This brief book is a valuable contribution to the literature and will be fascinating to those interested in the intersection of cognitive science and moral psychology. Travis Timmerman and Sean Clancy, The Philosophers' Magazine