Mind Reading, Brain Fingerprinting and the Law
Sunday, January 24th, 2010I’ve always been fascinated, well that’s a strong word, at least interested in mind reading probably like many of Silva Method practitioners. So when I found this article from ScienceDaily I wanted to share it with you. It’s a different twist because it discusses also the law.
——
ScienceDaily (Jan. 24, 2010) — What if a jury could decide a man’s guilt through mind reading? What if reading a defendant’s memory could betray their guilt? And what constitutes ‘intent’ to commit murder? These are just some of the issues debated and reviewed in the inaugural issue of WIREs Cognitive Science, the latest interdisciplinary project from Wiley-Blackwell, which for registered institutions will be free for the first two years.
In the article “Neurolaw,” in the inaugural issue of WIREs Cognitive Science, co-authors Walter Sinnott-Armstrong and Annabelle Belcher assess the potential for the latest cognitive science research to revolutionize the legal system.
Neurolaw, also known as legal neuroscience, builds upon the research of cognitive, psychological, and social neuroscience by considering the implications for these disciplines within a legal framework. Each of these disciplinary collaborations has been ground-breaking in increasing our knowledge of the way the human brain operates, and now neurolaw continues this trend.
Read more about Mind Reading, Brain Fingerprinting and the Law
(Via ScienceDaily.)




