http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/11.04/view.html?pg=3

The Fight to Control Your Mind

Richard Glen Boire

   
Should the government have the right to alter the biochemistry of your
brain? Richard Glen Boire, codirector and legal counsel of the Center for
Cognitive Liberty and Ethics, says no, and he's making his case before
the Supreme Court. In Sell v. US, the government argues that it can drug
Charles Sell, a dentist from Missouri, in order to make him competent to
stand trial. Boire, whose amicus brief argues that Sell has a right to
integrity of mind, explains why cognitive liberty goes way beyond this
one case. 

WIRED: What is cognitive liberty? 

BOIRE: It's the right to determine your own thinking processes, which
also means resisting attempts by others, including the government, to
manipulate the electrochemical state of your brain. In Sell's case, the
government wants to alter his thinking by forcibly drugging him. It's a
scary notion with deep implications for the modern status of freedom of
thought.

The Constitution already protects freedom of thought. 

That's true. What we're arguing is that the legal interpretation of the
Constitution needs expanding to account for recent scientific advances in
manipulating the brain. 

So you think the law isn't keeping up with technology?

To adapt Marshall McLuhan's phrase, the law drives forward by looking in
the rearview mirror. The law needs to be harmonized with what's going on
in society today so we're not just giving lip service to freedom of
thought while the thing that makes it meaningful, the autonomy of a
person's brain, is being eroded.

How is it being eroded?

The law needs to account for the plethora of new drugs and technologies
making it possible to augment, modulate, and surveil thinking. The
question increasingly is: Who has the power to do this, the individual or
the government? We contend that the power should rest with the
individual. 

Charles Sell is a pretty unsavory character, particularly in his views
about race. So why should we care what the Supreme Court says about his
cognitive liberty? 

Protecting speech for everybody means protecting it for unsavory people.
The same is true of cognitive liberty. The point is to avoid giving
government the power to commit cognitive censorship, whether it's
targeting people we agree with or people we don't. That's inherent in all
true freedoms.

_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to