Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Philosophy of Brain-Computer Interface

View through CrossRef
The Brain–Computer Interface (BCI) is not just a technological progress but an ontological rupture—a disruption of the fundamental structure of human cognition and learning. Existing definitions of BCI focus on its clinical functionalities and applications, with the following ethical discourse remaining confined to outcome-oriented frameworks of normative ethics. Yet BCI’s media-formal specificity, namely its capacity to link brain and world directly and bypassing natural sensorimotor pathways, remains philosophically unexamined. In particular, its potential to reconfigure the first-principle conditions of human cognition and the formation of the self is still undertheorized. A philosophical definition capable of accounting for this disruptive specificity is therefore urgently needed. Here, we propose a new philosophical definition that treats BCI as a novel cognitive media interface, and uses metaphysics as a tool to examine how its formal structure deconstructs not only traditional epistemology, but also the Kantian framework of sensibility, understanding, and the transcendental conditions of experience. Just as digital media externalized memory and perception, and artificial general intelligence (AGI) outsourced discernment, BCI threatens to bypass the bodily foundations of learning and expression altogether, risking a human subject reduced to a reactive mechanism without awareness. Through an interdisciplinary inquiry drawing on engineering, neuroscience, and metaphysics, we develop a theoretical framework, the Philosophy of BCI, to analyze how such cognitive transformations fundamentally reconfigure ontological conditions of selfhood, free will, moral judgment, emotion, aesthetic perception, and the shaping of tacit experience. Ultimately, the paper poses a critical question: In the age of BCI, does the human still exist through the body, or must we now redefine human subjectivity upon new cognitive conditions—those of disembodied awareness?
Center for Open Science
Title: Philosophy of Brain-Computer Interface
Description:
The Brain–Computer Interface (BCI) is not just a technological progress but an ontological rupture—a disruption of the fundamental structure of human cognition and learning.
Existing definitions of BCI focus on its clinical functionalities and applications, with the following ethical discourse remaining confined to outcome-oriented frameworks of normative ethics.
Yet BCI’s media-formal specificity, namely its capacity to link brain and world directly and bypassing natural sensorimotor pathways, remains philosophically unexamined.
In particular, its potential to reconfigure the first-principle conditions of human cognition and the formation of the self is still undertheorized.
A philosophical definition capable of accounting for this disruptive specificity is therefore urgently needed.
Here, we propose a new philosophical definition that treats BCI as a novel cognitive media interface, and uses metaphysics as a tool to examine how its formal structure deconstructs not only traditional epistemology, but also the Kantian framework of sensibility, understanding, and the transcendental conditions of experience.
Just as digital media externalized memory and perception, and artificial general intelligence (AGI) outsourced discernment, BCI threatens to bypass the bodily foundations of learning and expression altogether, risking a human subject reduced to a reactive mechanism without awareness.
Through an interdisciplinary inquiry drawing on engineering, neuroscience, and metaphysics, we develop a theoretical framework, the Philosophy of BCI, to analyze how such cognitive transformations fundamentally reconfigure ontological conditions of selfhood, free will, moral judgment, emotion, aesthetic perception, and the shaping of tacit experience.
Ultimately, the paper poses a critical question: In the age of BCI, does the human still exist through the body, or must we now redefine human subjectivity upon new cognitive conditions—those of disembodied awareness?.

Related Results

Brain Organoids, the Path Forward?
Brain Organoids, the Path Forward?
Photo by Maxim Berg on Unsplash INTRODUCTION The brain is one of the most foundational parts of being human, and we are still learning about what makes humans unique. Advancements ...
What is Analytic Philosophy
What is Analytic Philosophy
Special Issue: What is Analytic PhilosophyReferencesHaaparantaG. P. Baker and P. M. S. Hacker. Frege: Logical Excavations. Oxford, Blackwell, 1984.M. Dummett. The Interpretation of...
[RETRACTED] Gro-X Brain Reviews - Is Gro-X Brain A Scam? v1
[RETRACTED] Gro-X Brain Reviews - Is Gro-X Brain A Scam? v1
[RETRACTED]➢Item Name - Gro-X Brain➢ Creation - Natural Organic Compound➢ Incidental Effects - NA➢ Accessibility - Online➢ Rating - ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐➢ Click Here To Visit - Official Website - ...
Escaping the Shadow
Escaping the Shadow
Photo by Karl Raymund Catabas on Unsplash The interests of patients at most levels of policymaking are represented by a disconnected patchwork of groups … “After Buddha was dead, ...
Artificial Intelligence and Engineering: Philosophical and Scientific Perspectives in the New Era
Artificial Intelligence and Engineering: Philosophical and Scientific Perspectives in the New Era
In this work, a general definition, meaning, and importance of engineering are expressed generally, and the main branches of engineering are briefly discussed. The concept of techn...
Brain Biochemistry and Its Disease
Brain Biochemistry and Its Disease
The human brain is one of the important organs in the human body. It is the most complex of all organs. The brain is an organ composed of billions of nerve cells. It has parts of t...
Hydatid Disease of The Brain Parenchyma: A Systematic Review
Hydatid Disease of The Brain Parenchyma: A Systematic Review
Abstarct Introduction Isolated brain hydatid disease (BHD) is an extremely rare form of echinococcosis. A prompt and timely diagnosis is a crucial step in disease management. This ...
Depth-aware salient object segmentation
Depth-aware salient object segmentation
Object segmentation is an important task which is widely employed in many computer vision applications such as object detection, tracking, recognition, and ret...

Back to Top