More Than Human? The Ethics of Biologically Enhancing Soldiers
If we can engineer a soldier who can resist torture, would it still be wrong to torture this person with the usual methods? Starvation and sleep deprivation won’t affect a super-soldier who doesn’t need to sleep or eat. Beatings and electric shocks won’t break someone who can’t feel pain or fear like we do. This isn’t a comic-book story, but plausible scenarios based on actual military projects today.
In the next generation, our warfighters may be able to eat grass, communicate telepathically, resist stress, climb walls like a lizard, and much more. Impossible? We only need to look at nature for proofs of concept. For instance, dolphins don’t sleep (or they’d drown); Alaskan sled-dogs can run for days without rest or food; bats navigate with echolocation; and goats will eat pretty much anything. Find out how they work, and maybe we can replicate that in humans.
As you might expect, there are serious moral and legal risks to consider on this path. Last week in the UK, The Royal Society released its report “ Neuroscience, Conflict and Security.” This timely report worried about risks posed by cognitive enhancements to military personnel, as well as whether new nonlethal tactics, such as directed energy weapons, could violate either the Biological or Chemical Weapons Conventions.
While an excellent start, the report doesn’t go far enough. The impact of neural and physical human enhancements is more far-reaching than that, such as to the question of torturing the enhanced. Other issues also pose real challenges to military policies and broader society.
Read more. [Image: US Marine Corps]
I want to eat grass. So convenient! —A.P.
-
jmp82 liked this
-
alludingmisnomer reblogged this from theatlantic and added:
If we can engineer a soldier who can resist torture, would it still be wrong to torture this person with the usual...
-
andrewkays reblogged this from andrewxc
-
thetequilamockingbird reblogged this from theatlantic
-
ajdydasco liked this
-
illogical liked this
-
hansonxd liked this
-
lindasdf reblogged this from rlcstrk and added:
shutter island sort of introduces this concept
-
rlcstrk reblogged this from theatlantic
-
tktc liked this
-
warmdintherays reblogged this from newsweek
-
swim-again reblogged this from theatlantic and added:
Talking about X-5s, right?
-
stewartpence reblogged this from newsweek and added:
The prospect of all of this is mind blowing.
-
jwrb reblogged this from theatlantic
-
samanthaarrrgh reblogged this from newsweek
-
solestillseeking reblogged this from theatlantic
-
vivelavapeur reblogged this from logicianmagician
-
cristinagarafola reblogged this from theatlantic
-
sheaf reblogged this from newsweek and added:
i cant think about is what happens will people abuse power. helloooo superhero movies!
-
shawnlee reblogged this from newsweek
-
dragonfly88 reblogged this from newsweek
-
mybabydelilah reblogged this from pitchblende
-
aiekoh liked this
-
xx-rapunzel-xx liked this
-
jurme reblogged this from wnyc
-
sotto-in-su liked this
-
anindiscriminatecollection reblogged this from newsweek
-
genrevie liked this
-
gaiestar reblogged this from wizardblue
-
j4n3-k1m liked this
-
wizardblue reblogged this from theatlantic
-
nativescience liked this
-
ricardoandcrysta liked this
-
birthdaycaeescape reblogged this from newsweek
-
samuelchanyf reblogged this from newsweek
-
doubleyouseewhy reblogged this from pitchblende
-
jacony reblogged this from newsweek
-
peeringintomylookingglass reblogged this from newsweek
-
joonage liked this
-
logicianmagician reblogged this from theatlantic
-
jahn54 reblogged this from juliaaanne
-
proseqtr reblogged this from newsweek
-
crooneys reblogged this from theatlantic
-
meestertao reblogged this from theatlantic
-
rantvarehou1979 liked this
-
battleofbeatlemania liked this
-
jlabs25 liked this
-
pitchblende reblogged this from wnyc
-
juliaaanne reblogged this from newsweek
-
juliaaanne liked this
- Show more notes
![theatlantic:
More Than Human? The Ethics of Biologically Enhancing Soldiers
If we can engineer a soldier who can resist torture, would it still be wrong to torture this person with the usual methods? Starvation and sleep deprivation won’t affect a super-soldier who doesn’t need to sleep or eat. Beatings and electric shocks won’t break someone who can’t feel pain or fear like we do. This isn’t a comic-book story, but plausible scenarios based on actual military projects today.
In the next generation, our warfighters may be able to eat grass, communicate telepathically, resist stress, climb walls like a lizard, and much more. Impossible? We only need to look at nature for proofs of concept. For instance, dolphins don’t sleep (or they’d drown); Alaskan sled-dogs can run for days without rest or food; bats navigate with echolocation; and goats will eat pretty much anything. Find out how they work, and maybe we can replicate that in humans.
As you might expect, there are serious moral and legal risks to consider on this path. Last week in the UK, The Royal Society released its report “ Neuroscience, Conflict and Security.” This timely report worried about risks posed by cognitive enhancements to military personnel, as well as whether new nonlethal tactics, such as directed energy weapons, could violate either the Biological or Chemical Weapons Conventions.
While an excellent start, the report doesn’t go far enough. The impact of neural and physical human enhancements is more far-reaching than that, such as to the question of torturing the enhanced. Other issues also pose real challenges to military policies and broader society.
Read more. [Image: US Marine Corps]
I want to eat grass. So convenient! —A.P.](http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lzjlx6wwmZ1qcokc4o1_500.jpg)