The Man
Still there are extremes of just about everything and dangerous doesn’t always mean not acceptable.
Though I do take your point.
Yeah. Mind-control would be considered both dangerous and unacceptable by anybody who believes in any reasonable semblance of freedom.
One of your requirements is that the person being controlled doesn’t know its being done to them.
That would be the most clear-cut example, but if a person knew yet would be physically able to resist could also qualify as it would clearly cross a line.
So if it is imperceptible to the person being controlled it can be equally imperceptible to the person providing said control.
While I understand your point, from the moral standpoint, I tend to be more concerned with the manipulated over the manipulator.
You’d be surprised at what people just don’t realize. Heck a person might not even want to be in such control and can’t figure out why people just seem to want to do things for them.
While possibly true, there are at least as many if not more who would be more than happy with the control they possessed.
Also as in some sports and muscle memory type reflexive actions or responses over thinking can be a problem. If you try to actively think about what you’re doing and how you’re doing it your performance can suffer.
It can
Yet if you let the training, experience and developed reflexes execute unconsciously you can be at peak performance.
Yes, but complex tasks while they may become automatic with time often are skills that have to be learned step by step, then repeated over and over again until they become automatic.
You could also manipulate a person by teaching them beliefs to the point that they go from unconscious and at which point they become more influential than when they were beliefs that had to be consciously thought about. Look at religion and indoctrination if you don't believe me.
Well that’s the problem I don’t think there really is or can be a specific line but just perhaps some due process, informed consent and in the most extreme cases considerable review and justification.
It's important to have at least some rules of thumb set up, if not a range of boundaries that can be established that makes it clear when a line is being crossed. If the lines are too blurry, or are not clearly understood; a person could hypothetically argue that they're not exerting a dangerous and unacceptable influence, but instead just 'persuading' them.
People seek external control for those undesirable aspects of themselves that they can not control themselves and have been doing so for quite some time.
It's more than just controlling undesirable aspects of themselves -- sometimes it's just about controlling things other than themselves period.
The fact is that the more control an entity
(I say entity because this does not intrinsically specify a human) has over it's surroundings, the greater it's prospects for survival are, as well as the greater the quality of their life is
(Humans are the most intelligent organisms on earth and can take this to a greater level as a result). This can be dangerous when taken too far, and while some people have a reasonable desire for power; there are others who have an insatiable appetite for it; they want power simply for it's sake, and will never be happy until they have god-like control over everything.
So instead of trying to draw some line, perhaps we should focus on the checks, balances and procedural aspects for the increasing capability in this regard (whether it be psychological, sociological, chemical or by instrumentality).
And what do you propose? Even if you were going to propose checks and balances those would come in the form of laws, regulations, treaties, and so forth. You have to draw a line as to what crosses the figurative line.