« Free Will or Free Willy? |
Main
| Economics from the Neurons Up »
June 16, 2003
Supreme Court Upholds Right to Refuse Mind-Altering Drugs
Posted by Zack Lynch
The protection of our cognitive liberty was upheld today in no small part to CCLE's Amicus Brief which argues that forced medication infringes fundamental liberty.
The United States Supreme Court upheld the right to refuse unwanted psychotropic medication in its landmark decision in Sell v. United States. Ruling in favor of a St. Louis dentist who resisted government attempts to force medicate him with antipsychotic drugs, the Court held that while involuntary medication solely for trial competence purposes may be appropriate in some instances, those instances would likely be rare.
Glen Boire, who wrote the amicus brief said, "They made a good ruling, but they missed a major opportunity to recognize that thought is, at least partly, rooted in brain chemistry and that giving the government broad powers to directly manipulate the brain chemistry of a non-violent citizen would go against our nations most cherished values."
He continued, Emerging neurotechnology from pharmaceuticals to brain scanners are making consciousness more accessible and manipulable than ever before, said Boire, the court had a chance to update legal thinking about cognition in a way could have been very relevant now and in the coming decades, said Boire.
Comments (0)
| Category: Neuroethics
- RELATED ENTRIES
- Neurotech 2010: Translational Researchers Highlight Innovation
- The Neuro Revolution in China Progressing
- Speakers for Neurotech 2010 - Boston, May 19-20
- Giving the Brain a Voice: NIO Public Policy Tour in DC tomorrow
- McGovern Institue for Brain Research at MIT Goes Web 2.0
- The Neurodiagnostics Report 2010: Brain Imaging, Biomarkers and NeuroInformatics
- Neuropharma FDA Approvals Down in 2009
- Tel Aviv Neurotech Cluster Thrives