公众心理学和冷战洗脑恐慌。

History & philosophy of psychology Pub Date : 2020-01-01
Charlie Williams
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1950年,一个新词“洗脑”进入了英语语言。尽管它的含义总是模棱两可且不断演变,但它反映了人们对未来心理学在战争和家庭生活中的应用以及新技术控制和操纵人类思想的可能性的各种担忧。最近关于历史学家所谓的“冷战洗脑恐慌”的学术研究倾向于将洗脑视为冷战时期的偏执或幻想,这不仅从未发生过,而且从未得到科学研究的真正支持。根据最近的学术研究和我自己的研究,本文考察了专家和关于洗脑的流行话语之间的一些互动。对许多专家来说,冷战时期的洗脑恐慌为公众提供了一个接触当代心理学理论和研究的机会。但这绝不是一场他们完全掌控的讨论。我们会认为,关于洗脑的流行辩论不仅是一个处理科学"事实"的问题,而且存在于一个更多样化的想象中,既涉及当前的现实,也涉及未来的可能性。就像今天关于人工智能的报道一样,关于洗脑技术的讨论往往伴随着对未来新技术将如何使用以及由谁使用的猜测,这些猜测既疯狂又有根据。本文涵盖了三个例子:朝鲜战争的军事精神病学家,威廉·萨金特的流行理论和被广泛称为感觉剥夺的实验研究领域。它总结了一些关于当前数字时代对心理操纵的关注以及心理学专业知识在引导这些关注方面所起的作用的观察。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Public psychology and the Cold War brainwashing scare.

In 1950, a new word 'brainwashing' entered the English language. Though its meaning was always ambiguous and continuously evolving, it captured various concerns about the future uses of psychology in warfare and domestic life and the potential for new technologies to control and manipulate human minds. Recent scholarship on what historians have called the 'Cold War brainwashing scare' has tended to treat brainwashing as a Cold War paranoia or fantasy that not only was never to be, but was never really supported by scientific research. Drawing on recent scholarship and my own research, this paper examines some of the interactions between experts and popular discourses on brainwashing. For many experts, the Cold War brainwashing scare offered an opportunity to engage the public with contemporary psychological theory and research. But it was by no means a discussion over which they had complete control. It will be argued that the popular debate about brainwashing was not only a question of dealing with scientific 'facts', but existed in a more diverse imaginary concerned as much with present realities, as it was with future possibilities. Much in the same way that stories about artificial intelligence are reported today, discussions of techniques of brainwashing were often accompanied by speculation both wild and grounded about how new technology may be used in the future and by whom. This paper covers three examples: Korean War military psychiatrists, the popular theories of William Sargant and the field of experimental research known broadly as sensory deprivation. It concludes with some observations about current concerns about psychological manipulation in the digital age and the role psychology expertise plays in navigating these concerns.

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