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Transhumanism And War
June 08, 2015
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Human
enhancement technologies are expanding the frontiers of biotechnology
and changing the nature of warfare, international relations and
geopolitics.
Human
enhancement refers to the suite of techniques which alter the human
body beyond its normal healthy state. While ‘therapy’ is meant to ‘fix’
or ‘heal’ something damaged, enhancement technologies aim to stimulate
and augment the human body beyond its natural capacities. Some of the
possibilities available soon, such as “personality pills”,
super-intelligent machines or gene therapy to block normal aging, come
with extremely disruptive side effects.
As
is frequently the case with technological innovation, the origins of
enhancement technologies are closely linked to military research.
Soldiers equipped with devices for increased muscle strength, better
pain management or extra-alertness make ideal combatants. Yet whilst
administering pills that enable stress resistance or erase
post-traumatic stress might seem like ideal quick fixes, they raise
profound ethical and security concerns.
In
their most extreme form, such techniques could push us beyond what it
means to be human, effectively bringing us on the brink of
transhumanism. Transhumanism challenges the very notion of the human
condition as fixed, rooted and constant. Interventions to improve our
bodies, modify our pleasure centres, eradicate pathogenic conditions,
enhance cognitive functions or extend life will eventually alter
our very emotions emotions, such as fear.
The rise of the super soldier – at any cost
The
search for performance optimization via human enhancement in the
military is not new. Stimulant drugs have been used in the army for
decades. For instance, amphetamine, a synthetic drug which enhances the
neurotransmitters adrenalin and noradrenalin, started being widely
available to US troops in the 1960s for its effects in enhancing
alertness and physical endurance. More recently, in an effort to find
safer alternatives, the military has switched to the use of modafinil, a
drug first used by US troops during the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
Modafinil acts as a psycho-stimulant, enhances vigilance and overall
cognitive and physical performance even in sleep-deprived individuals.
It is estimated that the UK Ministry of Defence purchased 24,000
modafinil tablets in 2004.
Apart
from the use of such enhancements in the military, we are increasingly
witnessing the rise of technologies that can alter human biology
irreversibly, especially by incorporating technology within the human
body. Such technologies are radically different from previous eras as
they are much more invasive and potentially irreversible, marking a new
phase in the quest to create super soldiers.
The
US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is now at the
forefront of developing enhancement technologies. In the early 1990s,
DARPA acquired an avid interest in biology. DARPA’s turn to
biotechnology and biomimetics (getting inspiration from nature, the
animal world and metabolic flexibility) is now well on track, and
garnering growing federal funding. For the fiscal year 2015, DARPA’s
proposed budget request was of 2.915 billion, a steady increase from
previous years.
The
projects for human augmentation resulted from the recognition that even
with the most sophisticated weapons, war remains dependent on soldiers
that are subject to physical, cognitive, or psychological
vulnerabilities. This sentiment was openly expressed by the Agency,
which stated that the human being was “the weakest link in Defense
systems”.
Techno-integration
became critical to achieving this purpose. This requires creating a
symbiotic coupling between men and machines in order to enhance physical
and cognitive fitness. This mostly concerned restorative medicine for a
long time, but more recent advances in neural integration bring about
the real possibility that the peripheral nervous system could be coupled
with advanced technology with a simple plug. An extreme form of
invasive technology currently being explored is a micro-processing chip
which can be implanted beneath the skull and manipulated remotely.
Experiments
with so-called “non-invasive brain stimulation” at the US Air Force
Research Lab, made public in early 2014, tried a new technique to keep
soldiers awake and alert with electric shocks. The results were
promising: the electro-stimulation tested much better than the mere use
of caffeine. The doses of electrical current were carefully controlled
and succeeded in making soldiers wide-awake, refreshed and alert for as
long as 30 hours. Although still at an experimental stage, the
initiative proves that hijacking the brain for the end of military
effectiveness will be used justify whatever scientific means.
The
basics of neuro-stimulation now allow us to employ methods to boost our
ability to learn, pay attention to the environment, better recall
information, take risks or exercise self-control. The amount of
knowledge we have on the frontal cortex already permits us to understand
how to influence cognitive processes. Two major approaches are
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) and Transcranial Direct Current
Stimulation (TDCS) and the latter is already in use by the US military
to improve the performance of drone pilots. However, scientists caution
that TMS and TDS can produce many unintended effects. The military’s
ambitions could soon catch up with the neuro-stimulation technology to
the extent that soldiers’ reactions, responsiveness and emotionality
could be pre-programmed with precision. They could become faster, more
agile, alert, more receptive and fast learners, more disciplined or
docile or, if needed, less empathetic.
Other
projects pursued by DARPA in partnership with various universities
across the United States include programs such as: “Accelerated
Learning”, “Crystalline Cellulose Conversion to Glucose” (enabling
humans to eat grass and other non-digestible plants), “Human-aided
optical recognition”, (neuro-optical binoculars to detect threats),
“RealNose”, (extra sensors to detect chemicals as accurately as a dog)
and “Z-Man” (allowing humans to climb up walls like lizards).
While
DARPA officially claims these projects are without invasive mental or
physical effects, controversies abound and many questions about their
long-lasting implications remain open.
Human nature is frail, vulnerable and less adaptable than other species. It is therefore not surprising that DARPA would explicitly defend human enhancement projects based on a pragmatic calculation of cost, time and military effectiveness: “the idea is not simply to replace people with machines, but to team people with robots to create a more capable, agile and cost-effective force that lowers the risks of US casualties.”
Implications for international relations and geopolitics
Human nature is frail, vulnerable and less adaptable than other species. It is therefore not surprising that DARPA would explicitly defend human enhancement projects based on a pragmatic calculation of cost, time and military effectiveness: “the idea is not simply to replace people with machines, but to team people with robots to create a more capable, agile and cost-effective force that lowers the risks of US casualties.”
Implications for international relations and geopolitics
With
these developments, questions of law, international competition and
ethics will become more prominent as both states and societies will have
to respond to these technologies and their risks of spinning out of
control.
Enhancement
raises many ethical ’red flags’: how far will the imperative of
“military necessity” go in justifying biotechnological enhancement that
would otherwise be considered unacceptable? Could soldiers become
dehumanized tools, coerced into whatever is necessary to wage war? Are
safety considerations taken into account, and are norms of ethical
medical conduct extended to all enhancement technologies? Moreover, it
will be critical to explore whether enhancement is reversible or not and
to what extent a transhumanist soldier can switch back to the
‘pre-enhanced’ state.
Considerations
of risks from enhancement and transhumanism have been largely absent
from the military, but it is high time the military gave more
considerations to the ethical aspects of enhancing soldiers. These
should cover both long-term consequences for the soldiers’ health, as
well as the inequalities created between enhanced and non-enhanced
soldiers, since enhanced soldiers might eventually need to be treated
differently from the average, non-enhanced soldiers. Questions of
responsibility will ensue as well.Should the enhanced soldier run out of
control, who will be accountable: the soldier, the engineer or medical
teams that enhanced him?
Pressure
could soon mount for the US to have an ethical review of its
enhancement programs, an expectation that is easier to foresee in a
country where demands for accountability can be consequential even in an
institution as secretive as the Army. However, this might not be the
case everywhere, which brings the need for global discussions and
standard-setting for enhancement technologies.
Human
enhancement will be disruptive for the entire military establishment
and have far-reaching international relations and geopolitical
consequences. At a unit level, war-fighters might be enhanced
differently, or selectively, creating thus a class of enhanced vs.
“normal” soldiers. This will affect morale and unit cohesion
drastically, potentially causing resentment in some and a false sense of
entitlement in others. Such asymmetry of capabilities will also reflect
in international competition and international law, where countries
benefiting from advanced technologies of enhancement will possess an
advantage over those who will continue relying on non-enhanced soldiers.
In
the more near future, the implications of human enhancement in
international relations could entail similar reactions to those provoked
by the extensive use of drones by the United States. While one country
might regard enhancement as justifiable, appropriate and defensible,
others could perceive it as an unjust use of capabilities. This will
further exacerbate the sense of illegitimacy in war and disproportionate
material and human loss.
At
the same time, and as was the case with other technologies, it is not
improbable to anticipate a race of development and acquisition of human
enhancement technologies by many other countries in the coming decades,
thus further complicating international conflict resolution, code of
conduct and international law. In addition, given the potential effects
of these technologies on emotions, remorselessness and increased
physical power (for instance through the use of powered exoskeletons),
it should be expected that the level of brutality in warfare could
increase significantly, thus complicating the implementation of
international treaties and post-conflict reconciliation and
reconstruction efforts.
Read more at http://www.prophecynewswatch.com/2015/June08/084.html#IUjjWrYo3HHkZFH4.99
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