
The Vagueness of Demandingness Objections
Mar 28, 2024 - 38:29
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Professor Morten L. Kringlebach explains how recent advances in neuroimaging offer an insight into hedonia and eudaimonia, and draws out implications for neuropsychiatric disorders. Recent advances in whole-brain modelli...
The Neuroscience of a Life Well-Lived is an episode from Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics by Oxford University. Professor Morten L. Kringlebach explains how recent advances in neuroimaging offer an insight into hedonia and eudaimonia, and...
This episode belongs to Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics.
Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.
Published Jan 27, 2021, 44:36 long, audio available.
Professor Morten L. Kringlebach explains how recent advances in neuroimaging offer an insight into hedonia and eudaimonia, and draws out implications for neuropsychiatric disorders. Recent advances in whole-brain modelling have helped stratify the heterogeneity of anhedonia across neuropsychiatric disorders, and the key underlying components of the pleasure network. I will show how modelling of neuroimaging data from diverse hedonic routes such as psychedelics, meditation and music could potentially offer new insights not only into hedonia but potentially also eudaimonia. To this end, we have recently demonstrated the hierarchical organisation of consciousness in over thousand people, and the crucial role played by rare long-range exceptions to a fundamental exponential distance rule of brain connectivity. These processes are controlling the information cascade in the turbulent-like brain dynamics necessary for optimal orchestration of behaviour necessary a life well-lived. This has direct implications for getting a handle on eudaimonia and well-being which are difficult to study empirically, as well as the diagnosis and treatment of anhedonia in neuropsychiatric disorders. Professor Morten L. Kringlebach (Aarhus University, Denmark; University of Oxford) THE NEW ST CROSS SPECIAL ETHICS SEMINARS ARE JOINTLY ARRANGED BY THE OXFORD UEHIRO CENTRE AND THE WELLCOME CENTRE FOR ETHICS AND HUMANITIES (WEH).
You can listen to The Neuroscience of a Life Well-Lived online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
The Neuroscience of a Life Well-Lived is an episode from Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics by Oxford University.
This episode is 44:36 long.
This episode was published on Jan 27, 2021.
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The Neuroscience of a Life Well-Lived is from Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics by Oxford University.
Published Jan 27, 2021 and 44:36 long