{"title":"Mind Wars: Brain Research and National Defense","authors":"J. Moreno","doi":"10.5860/choice.44-4487","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In his fascinating new book, Jonathan D. Moreno investigates the deeply intertwined worlds of cutting-edge brain science, U.S. defense agencies, and a volatile geopolitical landscape where a nation's weaponry must go far beyond bombs and men. The first-ever exploration of the connections between national security and brain research, \"Mind Wars: Brain Research and National Defense\" reveals how many questions crowd this gray intersection of science and government and urges us to begin to answer them. From neuropharmacology to neural imaging to brain-machine interface devices that relay images and sounds between human brains and machines, Moreno shows how national security entities seek to harness the human nervous system in a multitude of ways as a potent weapon against the enemy soldier. Moreno charts such projects as monkeys moving robotic arms with their minds, technology to read the brain s thought patterns at a distance, the development of \"anti-sleep\" drugs to enhance soldiers battle performance and others to dampen their emotional reactions to the violence, and advances that could open the door to \"neuroweapons\" virus-transported molecules to addle the brain. \"As new kinds of weapons are added to the arsenal already at the disposal of fallible human leaders,\" Moreno writes, \"we need to find new ways to address the problem\"--of the ethical military application of so powerful and intimate a science. This book is the first step in confronting the quandaries inherent in this partnership of government and neuroscience, serves as a compelling wake-up call for scientists and citizens, and suggests that, with imagination, we might meet the needs of both security and civil liberty.\"","PeriodicalId":228485,"journal":{"name":"Learning To Live Together: Promoting Social Harmony","volume":"62 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2006-11-17","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"14","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Learning To Live Together: Promoting Social Harmony","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5860/choice.44-4487","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 14
Abstract
In his fascinating new book, Jonathan D. Moreno investigates the deeply intertwined worlds of cutting-edge brain science, U.S. defense agencies, and a volatile geopolitical landscape where a nation's weaponry must go far beyond bombs and men. The first-ever exploration of the connections between national security and brain research, "Mind Wars: Brain Research and National Defense" reveals how many questions crowd this gray intersection of science and government and urges us to begin to answer them. From neuropharmacology to neural imaging to brain-machine interface devices that relay images and sounds between human brains and machines, Moreno shows how national security entities seek to harness the human nervous system in a multitude of ways as a potent weapon against the enemy soldier. Moreno charts such projects as monkeys moving robotic arms with their minds, technology to read the brain s thought patterns at a distance, the development of "anti-sleep" drugs to enhance soldiers battle performance and others to dampen their emotional reactions to the violence, and advances that could open the door to "neuroweapons" virus-transported molecules to addle the brain. "As new kinds of weapons are added to the arsenal already at the disposal of fallible human leaders," Moreno writes, "we need to find new ways to address the problem"--of the ethical military application of so powerful and intimate a science. This book is the first step in confronting the quandaries inherent in this partnership of government and neuroscience, serves as a compelling wake-up call for scientists and citizens, and suggests that, with imagination, we might meet the needs of both security and civil liberty."
在这本引人入胜的新书中,乔纳森·d·莫雷诺(Jonathan D. Moreno)调查了尖端脑科学、美国国防机构和动荡的地缘政治格局(一个国家的武器必须远远超出炸弹和人的范畴)深深交织在一起的世界。第一次探索国家安全和大脑研究之间的联系,“思想战争:大脑研究和国防”揭示了有多少问题拥挤在这个科学和政府的灰色交叉点,并敦促我们开始回答这些问题。从神经药理学到神经成像,再到在人脑和机器之间传递图像和声音的脑机接口设备,莫雷诺展示了国家安全实体如何以多种方式利用人类神经系统作为对抗敌方士兵的有力武器。莫瑞诺列举了一些研究项目,比如猴子用意念移动机械臂,远距离读取大脑思维模式的技术,提高士兵战斗表现的“抗睡眠”药物的开发,以及抑制他们对暴力的情绪反应的药物,以及可能为“神经武器”打开大门的研究进展,这些药物是由病毒运输的分子来控制大脑的。莫雷诺写道:“随着易犯错误的人类领导人手中的武器库中不断增加新的武器,我们需要找到新的方法来解决这个问题”——将如此强大而亲密的科学应用于军事上的道德问题。这本书是面对政府和神经科学合作中固有的困境的第一步,为科学家和公民敲响了令人信服的警钟,并表明,凭借想象力,我们可能同时满足安全和公民自由的需求。”