• May 8, 2009

    The Paradox of Neurotechnology

    In this first of a 3-part series of conferences, the participants will discuss new neurotechnologies, their effects in treatment and enhancement, and the questions they raise concerning the nature and identity of the human person. Learn more
  • July 22, 2009

    Brain, Mind & the Nature of Being

    This gathering of prominent scholars will address the question of whether neurotechnology can provide an accurate insight to the mind, and what changes might be needed in the theories and concepts of neuroscience if a holistic concept of the human person is to emerge. Learn more
  • September 11, 2009

    Toward a Common Morality

    In this third and final conference, the participants will discuss the phenomenological and spiritual characteristics of human subjective experience, the neurophysiological and psychological basis of these domains, as well as the roles they play in the process of practical reasoning and moral decision making. Learn more

Past Symposia

Mind Body Symposium

The Nour Foundation
Blackfriars Hall, Oxford University
Georgetown University Symposium Series

Nour Foundation Oxford University Georgetown UniversityNour Foundation Blackfriars Hall Oxford University Georgetown University

Technology, Neuroscience, and the Nature of Being:
Considerations of Meaning, Morality & Transcendence

The aim of this three-part symposium series is to provide a forum for the launch of high-level interdisciplinary discussions intended to address and overcome the increasing isolation and fragmentation of the disciplines devoted to the science and advancement of the human person. The conferences, which will take place at Georgetown, Oxford University, and the United Nations in New York, will seek to incorporate recent advances in neuroscience into a more comprehensive paradigm that is consistent with what is known of the human condition from a philosophical, psychological, and theological perspective. In so doing, they will also examine the phenomenological and spiritual dimensions of human experience that have often been absent from or subordinated within contemporary technologically-oriented approaches to models of the human person and the psychology of the self. The discussions will therefore strive to reconcile the neuroscientific perspectives of the human person with the naturalistic values of ethical and moral action by examining the possibilities for establishing a system of common morality as a grounding human ecology that will enable multidisciplinary investigations into the full spectrum of human experience.

Perhaps more importantly, the long-term goal of this three-part multidisciplinary symposium series is for the ensuing discussions and publications to serve as a pediment for the development and implementation of a consilient curriculum of graduate-level education that meaningfully bridges the scientific disciplines with the classical humanities, integrating them for the first time within the university setting so as to conjoin faculty and students from programs ranging from neurogenetics, physics, and psychology to philosophy, law, and anthropology. Using these scholarly publications and books as core texts, the curriculum will foster and encourage the development of graduate theses and collaborative publication projects among faculty, students, and scholars at both national and international institutions of higher learning. The anticipated graduate program will feature a two-year course of interdisciplinary study to equip students with a thorough understanding of the links and tensions between these contrasting disciplines. The program will be developed with five to six students per year at Georgetown University, with a semester abroad at Oxford’s historic Centre for Philosophical Psychology.

 
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Nour Foundation

Founded in 1985, the Nour Foundation is a public charitable and nongovernmental organization in special consultative status to the United Nations. The Foundation explores universal principles and values underlying various disciplines through an integrative approach that seeks to cultivate greater understanding, tolerance, and unity among human beings.

Blackfriars Hall, Oxford

Blackfriars Hall is a Permanent Private Hall of the University of Oxford which specializes in philosophy and theology, as well as postgraduate programs in the fields of human rights, social policy, refugee studies, NGO studies, international relations, faith-based studies and related topics. Blackfriars Hall is home to the Las Casas Institute on Ethics, Governance and Social Justice.

Georgetown University

Founded in 1789, Georgetown University is the nation's oldest Catholic and Jesuit university. Today, Georgetown is a major international research university that embodies its founding principles in the diversity of its students, faculty, and staff, its commitment to justice and the common good, its intellectual openness, and its international character.