Still, I think it does open the door to very dangerous possibilities.
I suppose you're right. But some scientific discoveries pose a greater RISK of danger than others. The ability to determine what a person's thinking would violate every last ounce of privacy they have.
I think looking at your friend frowning is quite a different matter than using an fMRI to determine what they are looking at or thinking about...
INRM
EHLO,
I'm pretty sure that statement has some sarcasm in there...
The fact still remains that useing a lie dector (to passively determine what the reaction of a thought is), and using fMRI (to determine not what that reaction is but rather what the thought was that caused that reaction)
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) measures the haemodynamic response related to neural activity in the brain...Hemoglobin is diamagnetic when oxygenated but paramagnetic when deoxygenated. The magnetic resonance (MR) signal of blood is therefore slightly different depending on the level of oxygenation. These differential signals can be detected using an appropriate MR pulse sequence as blood-oxygen-level dependent (BOLD) contrast....In general, changes in BOLD signal are well correlated with changes in blood flow....The BOLD signal is only an indirect measure of neural activity, and is therefore susceptible to influence by non-neural changes in the body.
SThompson,
Still, would you say that with time they would become increasingly accurate to the point that their accuracy would approach 100%?
INRM
This kind of technology is old hat. Nothing new there as I read it.
*Yawn*
As DanishDynamite says, this is nothing new at all. I remember reading about this in New Scientist several years ago, and a quick look at the references in the paper show that they are just repeating similar experiments that have been done for over a decade. Sure, it might lead to more interesting things in the future, but at the moment there is nothing to get worked up over any more than there was 10 years ago.
I suppose you're right. But some scientific discoveries pose a greater RISK of danger than others. The ability to determine what a person's thinking would violate every last ounce of privacy they have.
When a person forsees a risk of great danger, is it wrong for a person to speak up in advance such as to warn people of the risk so that it doesn't happen?
I assume
<some far future paranoid stuff>...
I mean phones used to have those old dials on them, then they went to touch tone, then their cords became longer, then wireless phones came out. Sure they were huge as a loaf of bread but then they got down to the size of regular phones.
Then they got smaller and smaller and smaller, and were even developed with the ability to go online, text people, and all sorts of other things. Now we have razor's and even sliver phones that are tiny and thin.
Maybe it's not the best example, but things evolve well beyond their initial intention is what I'm getting at. Maybe I'm jumping to conclusions, or maybe I have better forsight than most. But it has me a bit worried.
INRM