Consent without memory.

Speaker : Professor Carl Craver, Department of Philosophy, Washington 
University in St Louis, USA.
Date : 8th of November 2017, 11:00AM until 12:00PM
Location : Australian Hearing Hub, 3.610, Macquarie University.

http://www.ccd.edu.au/events/seminars/abstract.php?abstract=660

Can someone with episodic amnesia consent to participate in a scientific 
experiment? What, if anything, does episodic memory contribute to the fact that 
persons can, and so deserve the right to, consent? These questions have taken 
center stage in recent historical reflections on the life of H.M., his central 
role in the advancement of the neuroscience of memory, and his treatment at the 
hands of Brenda Milner and Sue Corkin (Dittrich 2016). Yet this discussion has 
thus far been carried out without any sustained discussion of why it seems so 
plausible that memory, and episodic memory in particular, are required for one 
to have the right to speak for one’s self about participation in scientific 
experiments. I argue that “dual consent” approaches, common in research on 
amnesia, are in fact little improvement over consent by proxy models. I then 
show that several ordinary facts about consent are inconsistent with the 
intuition that memory of any sort, let alone episodic memory, is required for 
one properly to give consent. I then consider some empirical evidence about the 
residual capacities of individuals with episodic amnesia to understand relevant 
features of the consent process, to reason about their decisions, and to avoid 
forms of coercion during the consent encounter. In doing so, I argue that even 
individuals with complete episodic amnesia might well deserve the right to 
speak for themselves about whether they want to participate in scientific 
experiments.



Professor John Sutton

Department of Cognitive Science

Macquarie University

Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia

[email protected]

http://johnsutton.net/

<http://johnsutton.net/>https://mq.academia.edu/JohnSutton

https://www.cogsci.mq.edu.au/members/profile.php?memberID=237
---------
SydPhil mailing list

To unsubscribe, change your membership options, find answers to common 
problems, or visit our online archives, please go to the list information page:

https://mailman.sydney.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/sydphil

Reply via email to