This book examines the ethical and legal challenges presented by modern techniques of memory retrieval, especially within the context of potential use by the US government in courts of law.
This book examines the ethical and legal challenges presented by modern techniques of memory retrieval, especially within the context of potential use by the US government in courts of law. Specifically, Marc Blitz discusses the Fourth Amendments protections against unreasonable searches and the Fifth Amendment's self-incrimination clause. He also argues that we should pay close attention to another constitutional provision that individuals generally dont think of as protecting their privacy: The First Amendments freedom of speech. First Amendment values also protect our freedom of thought, and thisnot simply our privacyis what is at stake if government engaged in excessive monitoring of our minds.
Recenzijos
Searching Minds by Scanning Brains presents in-depth discussions of how the Fourth and Fifth Amendments have been used to make decisions about the constitutionality of brain scanning offered as evidence in criminal cases. This book could be a very helpful text for law students, not only because of the resources and format of the book but also because of Blitzs modeling of the disciplined logical and balanced thinking of an expert legal scholar. (Patricia E. Freed, PsycCRITIQUES, Vol. 62 (32), August, 2017)
1. Introduction
2. Constitutional Puzzles (and (Neuro)technological Changes
3. Lie Detection, Mind Reading, and Brain Reading
4. The Fifth Amendment: Self-Incrimination and the Brain
5. The Fourth (and First) Amendment
6. Conclusion
Marc Jonathan Blitz is Alan Joseph Bennett Professor of Law at Oklahoma City University, USA, and series editor of Palgrave Studies in Law, Neuroscience, and Human Behavior.