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Steven Rose began this book with a commentary on the spectacular advances in the neurosciences over recent years, the claims for their implications, and possible aspirations for the future. The chapters that followed have explained and explored many of these aspects in some detail. We now approach this concluding chapter with somewhat different perspectives because, unlike other authors, we have no personal distinction or first-hand knowledge in modern neuroscience or any of the cognate disciplines brought into the discussion such as philosophy, law or social sciences. We come from other areas of science, and from the oversight of medical research linked to issues of public interest and government policy. One of us (DR) has been more concerned with practical applications and industry, and the other (BW) with the parliamentary process and with public sensitivities to ethics and welfare. It is natural for us to look, as it were, down the other end of the telescope to ask questions not so much about neuroscience, philosophy, law, or social sciences in themselves, but about how the new developments might impact on everyday life.