Neuroscience
The future of
mind control
May 23rd 2002
From The Economist print edition
People already
worry about genetics. They should worry about brain science too
IN AN attempt to
treat depression, neuroscientists once carried out a simple experiment.
Using electrodes, they stimulated the brains of women in ways that caused
pleasurable feelings. The subjects came to no harmindeed their symptoms
appeared to evaporate, at least temporarilybut they quickly fell in love
with their experimenters.
Such a procedure
(and there have been worse in the history of neuroscience) poses far more of
a threat to human dignity and autonomy than does cloning. Cloning is the
subject of fierce debate, with proposals for wholesale bans. Yet when it
comes to neuroscience, no government or treaty stops anything. For decades,
admittedly, no neuroscientist has been known to repeat the love experiment.
A scientist who used a similar technique to create remote-controlled rats
seemed not even to have entertained the possibility. Humans? Who said
anything about humans? he said, in genuine shock, when questioned. We work
on rats.
Ignoring a
possibility does not, however, make it go away. If asked to guess which
group of scientists is most likely to be responsible, one day, for
overturning the essential nature of humanity, most people might suggest
geneticists. In fact neurotechnology poses a greater threatand also a more
immediate one. Moreover, it is a challenge that is largely ignored by
regulators and the public, who seem unduly obsessed by gruesome fantasies of
genetic dystopias.
A person's genetic
make-up certainly has something important to do with his subsequent
behaviour. But genes exert their effects through the brain. If you want to
predict and control a person's behaviour, the brain is the place to start.
Over the course of the next decade, scientists may be able to predict, by
examining a scan of a person's brain, not only whether he will tend to
mental sickness or health, but also whether he will tend to depression or
violence. Neural implants may within a few years be able to increase
intelligence or to speed up reflexes. Drug companies are hunting for
molecules to assuage brain-related ills, from paralysis to shyness (see
article).
A public debate
over the ethical limits to such neuroscience is long overdue. It may be hard
to shift public attention away from genetics, which has so clearly shown its
sinister side in the past. The spectre of eugenics, which reached its
culmination in Nazi Germany, haunts both politicians and public. The fear
that the ability to monitor and select for desirable characteristics will
lead to the subjugation of the undesirableor the merely unfashionableis
well-founded.
Not so long ago
neuroscientists, too, were guilty of victimising the mentally ill and the
imprisoned in the name of science. Their sins are now largely forgotten,
thanks in part to the intractable controversy over the moral status of
embryos. Anti-abortion lobbyists, who find stem-cell research and cloning
repugnant, keep the ethics of genetic technology high on the political
agenda. But for all its importance, the quarrel over abortion and embryos
distorts public discussion of bioethics; it is a wonder that people in the
field can discuss anything else.
In fact, they
hardly do. America's National Institutes of Health has a hefty budget for
studying the ethical, legal and social implications of genetics, but it
earmarks nothing for the specific study of the ethics of neuroscience. The
National Institute of Mental Health, one of its component bodies, has seen
fit to finance a workshop on the ethical implications of cyber-medicine,
yet it has not done the same to examine the social impact of drugs for
hyperactivity, which 7% of American six- to eleven-year-olds now take. The
Wellcome Trust, Britain's main source of finance for the study of biomedical
ethics, has a programme devoted to the ethics of brain research, but the
number of projects is dwarfed by its parallel programme devoted to genetics.
The worriers have
not spent these resources idly. Rather, they have produced the first
widespread legislative and diplomatic efforts directed at containing
scientific advance. The Council of Europe and the United Nations have
declared human reproductive cloning a violation of human rights. The Senate
is soon to vote on a bill that would send American scientists to prison for
making cloned embryonic stem cells.
Yet
neuroscientists have been left largely to their own devices, restrained only
by standard codes of medical ethics and experimentation. This relative lack
of regulation and oversight has produced a curious result. When it comes to
the brain, society now regards the distinction between treatment and
enhancement as essentially meaningless. Taking a drug such as Prozac when
you are not clinically depressed used to be called cosmetic, or
non-essential, and was therefore considered an improper use of medical
technology. Now it is regarded as just about as cosmetic, and as
non-essential, as birth control or orthodontics. American legislators are
weighing the so-called parity issuethe argument that mental treatments
deserve the same coverage in health-insurance plans as any other sort of
drug. Where drugs to change personality traits were once seen as medicinal
fripperies, or enhancements, they are now seen as entitlements.
This flexible
attitude towards neurotechnologyuse it if it might work, demand it if it
doesis likely to extend to all sorts of other technologies that affect
health and behaviour, both genetic and otherwise. Rather than resisting
their advent, people are likely to begin clamouring for those that make
themselves and their children healthier and happier.
This might be bad
or it might be good. It is a question that public discussion ought to try to
settle, perhaps with the help of a regulatory body such as the Human
Fertilisation and Embryology Authority, which oversees embryo research in
Britain. History teaches that worrying overmuch about technological change
rarely stops it. Those who seek to halt genetics in its tracks may soon
learn that lesson anew, as rogue scientists perform experiments in defiance
of well-intended bans. But, if society is concerned about the pace and
ethics of scientific advance, it should at least form a clearer picture of
what is worth worrying about, and why.
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