You've likely read more pop neuroscience than I have. It's elicited criticism from conservatives who fear that the fruits of cognitive science will be used to justify depredation and depravity, and eventually rob us of our humanity — or that this is already happening. Do you think they're right about that?
I think that's the wrong question. It frames the matter in terms of Science (hurrah for rationality!) vs. Conservatives (p*l*t*c*lly motivated bias, boo, hiss!), and suddenly the entirety of what might be said on the matter is condensed down into two isolated points ready-labelled as True and False.
Why conservatives, anyway? It's just as easy to hand-wring it from a "liberal" point of view. (The quotes to indicate that I am not au fait with American political terminology and am not entirely sure what was intended by "conservative".)
steven0461 (comment under "Preference For (Many) Future Worlds"):
Yvain (Behaviorism: Beware Anthropomorphizing Humans):
Eliezer (Sympathetic Minds):
So, what if, the more we understand something, the less we tend to anthropomorphize it, and the less we empathize/sympathize with it? See this post for some possible examples of this. Or consider Yvain's blue-minimizing robot. At first we might empathize or even sympathize with its apparent goal of minimizing blue, at least until we understand that it's just a dumb program. We still sympathize with the predicament of the human-level side module inside that robot, but maybe only until we can understand it as something besides a "human level intelligence"? Should we keep carrying forward behaviorism's program of de-anthropomorphizing humans, knowing that it might (or probably will) reduce our level of empathy/sympathy towards others?