Article ID: CBB948170844

On ‘Modified Human Agents’: John Lilly and the Paranoid Style in American Neuroscience (2019)

unapi

The personal papers of the neurophysiologist John C. Lilly at Stanford University hold a classified paper he wrote in the late 1950s on the behavioural modification and control of ‘human agents’. The paper provides an unnerving prognosis of the future application of Lilly’s research, then being carried out at the National Institute of Mental Health. Lilly claimed that the use of sensory isolation, electrostimulation of the brain, and the recording and mapping of brain activity could be used to gain ‘push-button’ control over motivation and behaviour. This research, wrote Lilly, could eventually lead to ‘master-slave controls directly of one brain over another’. The paper is an explicit example of Lilly’s preparedness to align his research towards Cold War military aims. It is not, however, the research for which Lilly is best known. During the 1960s and 1970s, Lilly developed cult status as a far-out guru of consciousness exploration, promoting the use of psychedelics and sensory isolation tanks. Lilly argued that, rather than being used as tools of brainwashing, these techniques could be employed by the individual to regain control of their own mind and retain a sense of agency over their thoughts and actions. This article examines the scientific, intellectual, and cultural relationship between the sciences of brainwashing and psychedelic mind alteration. Through an analysis of Lilly’s autobiographical writings, I also show how paranoid ideas about brainwashing and mind control provide an important lens for understanding the trajectory of Lilly’s research.

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Authors & Contributors
Hartogsohn, Ido
James Nikopoulos
Ross, Colin A.
Allen Frances
Chris Elcock
Cornel, Tabea
Journals
Journal of the History of the Neurosciences
Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences
History of Psychology
The Senses and Society
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science
Publishers
Yale University Press
University of Chicago Press
The MIT Press
Random House
Dana Press
Concepts
Psychology
Neurosciences
Brain
Psychedelics
Emotions; passions
LSD (drug)
People
James, William
Freud, Sigmund
Leary, Timothy
Thompson, Hunter S.
Vygotskii, Lev Semenovich
Zangwill, Oliver
Time Periods
20th century, late
21st century
20th century, early
20th century
19th century
Places
United States
Great Britain
Russia
Canada
Vienna (Austria)
Institutions
National Institute on Drug Abuse
United States. Army
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT
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