The shortsighted brain: Neuroeconomics and the governance of choice in time

被引:30
|
作者
Schuell, Natasha Dow [1 ]
Zaloom, Caitlin [2 ]
机构
[1] MIT, Program Sci Technol & Soc, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
[2] NYU, Dept Social & Cultural Anal, New York, NY USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
economics; epistemology; governance; liberalism; neuroeconomics; neuroscience; policy; rationality; SELF-CONTROL; NEUROSCIENCE; DECISION; IMMEDIATE; PREFERENCE; REWARDS; IMAGES;
D O I
10.1177/0306312710397689
中图分类号
N09 [自然科学史]; B [哲学、宗教];
学科分类号
01 ; 0101 ; 010108 ; 060207 ; 060305 ; 0712 ;
摘要
The young field of neuroeconomics converges around behavioral deviations from the model of the human being as Homo economicus, a rational actor who calculates his choices to maximize his individual satisfaction. In a historical moment characterized by economic, health, and environmental crises, policymakers have become increasingly concerned about a particular deviation for which neuroeconomics offers a biological explanation: Why do humans value the present at the expense of the future? There is contentious debate within the field over how to model this tendency at the neural level. Should the brain be conceptualized as a unified decision-making apparatus, or as the site of conflict between an impetuous limbic system at perpetual odds with its deliberate and provident overseer in the prefrontal cortex? Scientific debates over choice-making in the brain, we argue, are also debates over how to define the constraints on human reason with which regulative strategies must contend. Drawing on ethnographic and archival research, we explore how the brain and its treatment of the future become the contested terrain for distinct visions of governmental intervention into problems of human choice-making.
引用
收藏
页码:515 / 538
页数:24
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