NYT
 
 
 
A Conversation With S. Matthew Liao
Studying Ethical Questions as the Brain’s Black Box Is  Unlocked

 
 
By _CLAUDIA  DREIFUS_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/d/claudia_dreifus/index.html)
 
Published: December 17, 2012 

 
In a world of proliferating professions, _S. Matthew Liao_ 
(http://www.smatthewliao.com/about/)  has a singular  title: neuroethicist. Dr. 
Liao, 40, 
the director of the bioethics program at _New  York University_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/n/new_york_university/in
dex.html?inline=nyt-org) , deploys the tools of philosophy, history, 
psychology,  religion and ethics to understand the impact of neuroscientific 
breakthroughs. 
 
 
We spoke over four hours in two sessions. A condensed and edited version of 
 the conversations follows.  
You’re a philosopher by training. How did  philosophy lead to neuroethics? 
Mine’s the typical immigrant’s story. My family moved  to Cincinnati from 
Taiwan in the early 1980s. Once here, my siblings gravitated  towards the 
sciences. I was the black sheep. I was in love with the humanities.  So I didn’
t go to M.I.T. — I went to Princeton, where I got a degree in  philosophy. 
This, of course, worried my parents. They’d never met a philosopher  with a 
job.  
Do you have any insight on why scientific  careers are so attractive to new 
Americans?  
You don’t need to speak perfect English to do science.  And there are job 
opportunities.  
Define neuroethics.  
It’s a kind of subspecialty of bioethics. Until very  recently, the human 
mind was a black box. But here we are in the 21st century,  and now we have 
all these new technologies with opportunities to look inside  that black box —
 a little.  
With functional magnetic imaging, f.M.R.I., you can  get pictures of what 
the brain is doing during cognition. You see which parts  light up during 
brain activity. Scientists are trying to match those lights with  specific 
behaviors.  
At the same time this is moving forward, there are all  kinds of drugs 
being developed and tested to modify behavior and the mind. So  the question 
is: 
Are these new technologies ethical?  
A neuroethicist can look at the downstream  implications of these new 
possibilities. We help map the conflicting arguments,  which will, hopefully, 
lead to more informed decisions. What we want is for  citizens and policy 
makers to be thinking in advance about how new technologies  will affect them. 
As 
a society, we don’t do enough of that.  
Give us an example of a technology that  entered our lives without 
forethought. 
The Internet. It has made us more connected to the  world’s knowledge. But 
it’s also reduced our actual human contacts with one  another.  
So what would be an issue you might look at  through a neuroethics lens? 
New drugs to alter memory. Right now, the government  is quite interested 
in propranolol. They are testing it on soldiers with  post-traumatic stress 
disorder. The good part is that the drug helps traumatized  veterans by 
removing the bad memories causing them such distress. A  neuroethicist must 
ask, “
Is this good for society, to have warriors have their  memories wiped out 
chemically? Will we start getting conscienceless soldiers?”  
What do you  think? 
It is a serious business removing memories, because  memories can affect 
your personal identity. They can impact who you think you  are. I’d 
differentiate between offering such a drug to every distressed soldier  and 
giving it 
only to certain individuals with a specific need.  
Let’s say you have a situation like that in “Sophie’s  Choice,” where the 
memories are so bad that the person is suicidal. Even if the  drug causes 
them to live in falsehood, that would have been preferable to  suicide.  
But should we give it to every soldier who goes into  battle? No! You need 
memory for a conscience. Doing this routinely might create  super-immoral 
soldiers. As humans we have natural moral reactions to the beings  around us — 
sympathy for other people and animals. When you start to tinker with  those 
neurosystems, we’re not going to react to our fellow humans in the right  
way anymore. One wonders about the wrong people giving propranolol routinely 
to  genocidal gangs in places like Rwanda or Syria.  
Some researchers claim to be near to using  f.M.R.I.’s to read thoughts. Is 
this really happening? 
The technology, though still crude, appears to be  getting closer. For 
instance, there’s one research group that asks subjects to  watch movies. When 
they look at the subject’s visual cortex while the subject is  watching, they 
can sort of recreate what they are seeing — or a semblance of it.  
Similarly, there’s another experiment where they can  tell in advance 
whether you’re going to push the right or the left button. On  the basis of 
these 
experiments some people claim they’ll soon be able to read  minds. Before 
we go further with this, I’d like to think more about what it  could mean. 
The technology has the potential to destroy any concept of inner  privacy.  
What about using f.M.R.I. to replace lie  detectors? 
The fact is we don’t really know if f.M.R.I.’s will be  any more reliable 
or predictive. Nonetheless, in India, _a  woman was convicted_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/15/world/asia/15brainscan.html?pagewanted=all)  
of 
poisoning her boyfriend on the basis of f.M.R.I.  evidence. The authorities 
said 
that based on the pictures of blood flow in her  brain, she was lying to 
them.  
In American courts, there’s another issue, too.  Defendants cannot be 
forced to testify against themselves — the Fifth Amendment.  So the legal and 
ethical question here is: If the police put you into a machine  that’s reading 
your mind, are you being forced to testify against yourself? At  present, a 
person can be forced to surrender DNA. Is an f.M.R.I. scan the same  thing?  
On the other hand, criminal defendants are beginning  to use brain scans to 
bolster their claims. Recently there was this case where  this guy was 
charged with tossing his wife out of a window. In court, he  produced a brain 
scan showing a frontal-lobe tumor. On the basis of that, his  crime was 
reduced from murder to manslaughter. It was a smart defense move,  though the 
technology’s predictive accuracy remains questionable. I like it  better when 
judges say, “We can’t admit this stuff; we just don’t know what this  
technology can do yet.”  
Lately, you’ve been writing  about this question: Do people own their 
memories? Most of us think, “Of course  we do.” Why are you bringing this up?  
Because there are some new technologies coming where  we may be able to 
enhance cognition and memory with implanted chips. Right now,  if you work for 
a company, when you quit, your boss can take away your computer,  your 
phone, but not your memory. Now, when we come to a point when an employee  gets 
computer chip enhancements of their memory, who will own it? Will the chip  
manufacturer own it as Facebook owns the data you upload on their products at 
 present?  
Even today, some people claim that our iPhones are  really just extensions 
of our minds. If that’s true, we already lack ownership  of that data. Will 
a corporate employer own the chip and everything on it? Can  employers 
selectively take those memories away? Could they force you to take  propranolol 
as a condition of employment so that you don’t give away what they  define as 
corporate secrets?  
Someone needs to ask these questions, don’t you think?  
Do you have a favorite movie? 
I have several. The one I most often return to is,  “Eternal Sunshine of 
the Spotless Mind,” where Kate Winslet and Jim Carrey, at  the end of an 
affair, employ a technology that’s supposed to erase their  memories of each 
other. But it doesn’t quite work out, and therein is the story.  
And this may well be how things will go when we get  technology that can do 
that. In many ways, writers and film directors have been  acting as 
unofficial neuroethicists by anticipating the problems of our new  capabilities.

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