With impeccable timing considering the season, and obviously 
inspired by it,  the Chronicle of Higher Education has just 
released a list of the 25 scariest science experiments ever 
conducted. Unfortunately, the piece is only available by 
subscription but I can tell you about it.

Although they use the term "experiment" loosely, not to mention 
the word "science", they relate projects dear to the hearts of 
psychologists. These include:

Harry Harlow's "pit of despair" study which subjected young 
monkeys to severe deprivation and resulted in correspondingly 
severe psychotic behaviour

Zimbardo's Stanford prison experiment

The Milgram experiments on obedience to authority

The  treatment of Emma Eckstein for "nasal reflex neurosis" by 
Freud and Fliess

The Tuskegee syphilis experiment

Jose Delgado's demonstration bull fight using electrical 
intracranial stimulation of the brain to stop a charging bull 
(couldn't they just have cancelled its credit card?)

The CIA's MK-ULTRA's attempts at mind control (with an 
unfortunate Canadian connection to mad scientist Donald 
Cameron at the Montreal Allen Memorial Institute)

I agree that all of these, although dubious whether all are 
"science" or "experiments", are all sufficiently scary to be worthy 
of Halloween and inclusion on this list,  with one exception. This 
is the Tuskegee syphilis experiment, which as Allen Esterson 
recently reminded us, may not deserve its notorious status as a 
highly unethical experiment. But the myth is now unstoppable.

Did they miss any? Nominations welcome. 

I'd like to mention one surprising entry on the list, although it 
doesn't pertain to psychology. This is the spidergoat project of 
Nexia Biotechnologies, which was once a small company based 
in Montreal. They inserted the spider silk gene into goats. Silk 
protein was extracted from the goat milk, and spun into thread. 
The aim was to produce artifical spider silk, which when it 
comes from a spider, is amazingly strong and light. What's 
scary about that?

I was so taken with this idea that I invested in Nexia. Others 
were impressed as well,  such as the acclaimed Canadian 
novelist Margaret Atwood, who included an account of the 
company in her science-fiction dystopian novel, Oryx and Craik 
(2003).

Alas, it was not to be. After successfully demonstrating proof of 
principle (spinning fibre from spider protein extracted from goat 
milk), they suddenly went out of business, selling off their 
assets. Their president told me (I asked) that they couldn't find a 
market for their product, which seems incredible, given its 
obvious promise for medical and military applications.

I've since discovered a comment which suggests that the real 
reason was that they didn't insert a complete gene for spider silk 
in the goats, but only a fragment, and the resulting silk was of 
inferior quality. I'm left with about $15 worth of stock in an oil 
industry service company, and a Chinese elevator company. I 
won't tell you what I started with. Now that's scary.

Stephen

-----------------------------------------------------------------
Stephen L. Black, Ph.D.          
Professor of Psychology, Emeritus   
Bishop's University               
 e-mail:  [email protected]
2600 College St.
Sherbrooke QC  J1M 1Z7
Canada
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

---
To make changes to your subscription contact:

Bill Southerly ([email protected])

Reply via email to