14 Quotes on Neuroethics
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In erasing the scars of the mind, we venture into a landscape ungrasped; who are we if memory caves to easing pain but erodes intelligence!
Author:
Alyssa Connors
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Elliminating trauma doesn't free the soul; rather, it risks intimating patterns banished forever from our consciousness
Author:
Clara Ashlake
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To tamper with memory is to paint over the canvas of life; we may alter the brush strokes, but the Smith gray must always drip through.
Author:
Aiden Waters
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In modifying our memories, we not only sculpt the past we recall but reshape the essence of our identities, for in recollection lies the fragile tapestry of who we are.
Author:
Ava Harrison
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In tinkering with memories, we reshape not only what we remember, but who we are fundamentally - isn't reliving trauma sacrosanct, while forgetfulness smiles coyly at truths?
Author:
Ava Harmon
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To edit one's memories is to redefine identity; every slice from our past is a thread that weaves the fabric of who we become.
Author:
Ava Grayler
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To erase our memories is not merely to tap open the liquid scribbles of the past; it is to flood the collectif repertory bert nuances yearning to reach for coherence.
Author:
Aldine Farber
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When memories become malleable commodities we shape which tensions arise most--between the remembrance of humanity's burdens and a sight blinded against wisdom.
Author:
Elara Strovne
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To rewrite a memory is to temper a life's narrative, yet such alteration may deny people the full breadth of becoming--they grow from both happiness and regret.
Author:
Orion Fairfax
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Who gets to decide which memories shape our humanity, arguments crafted in sterile laboratories apart from the labyrinthine landscapes of minds engaged in the dialogue of regret and joy?
Author:
Elaine Winters
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Editing memories is akin to reshaping the foundations of identity; each revised happiness changes not just a wound, but the very thread of sail taught by the winds of experience.
Author:
Clara Handelsman
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Memory editing is like wielding a scalpel nests--where one cut may heal past wounds, yet rends the very fabric of self.
Author:
Ava Rothstein
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Memory editing challenges us to reconsider the essence of our humanity; knowing our past defines us even amid corrections that clean our narrative deaf to empathy's call.
Author:
Eden Devereaux
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Reshaping memories may lighten the burden of legacy, but it could equally dust away the foundation of identity.
Author:
Elena Nafus
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