Super soldiers : the ethical, legal and social implications

Author(s)

    • Galliott, Jai
    • Lotz, Mianna

Bibliographic Information

Super soldiers : the ethical, legal and social implications

edited by Jai Galliott, Mianna Lotz

(Emerging technologies, ethics and international affairs)

Ashgate, c2015

  • : hbk

Available at  / 1 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The Spartan City State produced what is probably one of the most iconic and ruthless military forces in recorded history. They believed that military training and education began at birth. Post-World War II saw a shift to army tanks, fighter jets and missiles that would go on to fight the next huge battle in Northern Europe. Today, with the advent of unmanned systems, our hopes are attached to the idea that we can fight our battles with soldiers pressing buttons in distant command centres. However, soldiers must now be highly trained, super strong and have the intelligence and mental capacity to handle the highly complex and dynamic military operating environment. It is only now as we progress into the twenty-first century that we are getting closer to realising the Spartan ideal and creating a soldier that can endure more than ever before. This book provides the first comprehensive and unifying analysis of the moral, legal and social questions concerning military human enhancement, with a view toward developing guidance and policy that may influence real-world decision making.

Table of Contents

  • Chapter 1 Introduction, JaiGalliott, MiannaLotz
  • Part I What, Why and How
  • Chapter 2 Abjecting Humanity, AndresVaccari
  • Chapter 3 On Human and Machine, JosephPugliese
  • Chapter 4 The Super Soldier as Scholar, BarbaraGurgel, AveryPlaw
  • Chapter 5 Morally Enhanced Soldiers, RyanTonkens
  • Part II General Problems and Consequences
  • Chapter 6 Enhanced Warfighters as Private Military Contractors, ArminKrishnan
  • Super Soldiers and Technological Asymmetry, RobertSimpson
  • Part III Military Medical Ethics
  • Chapter 8 Among Super Soldiers, Killing Machines and Addicted Soldiers, Anke Snoek
  • Chapter 9 Bio-Technical Challenges to Moral Autonomy, SteveMatthews
  • Chapter 10 Ethical Considerations in Military Surgical Innovation, Katrina Hutchison, Wendy Rogers
  • Part IV Law, Responsibility and Governance
  • Chapter 11 Assigning Responsibility in Enhanced Warfare, AlexLeveringhaus
  • Chapter 12 Collective Responsibility for the Robopocalypse, Seumas Miller
  • Chapter 13 Singularity and the Art of Warfighters: The Geneva Convention on Trial, Joseph Savirimuthu

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