
Contents
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1 Introduction 1 Introduction
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2 Rights, intrusions, and permissibility 2 Rights, intrusions, and permissibility
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3 Self-ownership 3 Self-ownership
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4 Consensual neurointerventions for autonomous agents 4 Consensual neurointerventions for autonomous agents
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5 Non-consensual neurointerventions for autonomous agents 5 Non-consensual neurointerventions for autonomous agents
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6 Neurointerventions for non-autonomous individuals 6 Neurointerventions for non-autonomous individuals
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7 Conclusion 7 Conclusion
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References References
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6 Neurointerventions, Self-Ownership, and Enforcement Rights
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Published:November 2018
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Abstract
Individuals who have not intruded, and who do not risk intruding, upon the rights of others, normally are wronged by harmful non-consensual neurointerventions. Nonetheless, this chapter argues that neurointerventions sometimes do not wrong the intervenee; namely, when (1) suitably valid consent has been given by the intervenee, or (2) the intervenee risks non-rightfully intruding upon the rights of others and the intervention is proportionate and necessary for suitably reducing the intrusion-harms she imposes, or (3) the intervenee is not psychologically autonomous and the intervention is in her interests. Moreover, in the second case, it wrongs an individual to impose harmful non-consensual alternatives to neurointerventions (such as incarceration) when they impose greater intrusion-harm on the individual and do not achieve a greater reduction in the relevant intrusion-harm she imposes.
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