Kraft Calvin J, Giordano James
Program of Liberal Studies, Neuroscience and Behavior, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN, United States.
Departments of Neurology and Biochemistry, Pellegrino Center for Clinical Bioethics, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, DC, United States.
Front Neurosci. 2017 Nov 8;11:621. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2017.00621. eCollection 2017.
Advances in neuroscientific techniques have found increasingly broader applications, including in legal neuroscience (or "neurolaw"), where experts in the brain sciences are called to testify in the courtroom. But does the incursion of neuroscience into the legal sphere constitute a threat to individual liberties? And what legal protections are there against such threats? In this paper, we outline individual rights as they interact with neuroscientific methods. We then proceed to examine the current uses of neuroscientific evidence, and ultimately determine whether the rights of the individual are endangered by such approaches. Based on our analysis, we conclude that while federal evidence rules constitute a substantial hurdle for the use of neuroscientific evidence, more ethical safeguards are needed to protect against future violations of fundamental rights. Finally, we assert that it will be increasingly imperative for the legal and neuroscientific communities to work together to better define the limits, capabilities, and intended direction of neuroscientific methods applicable for use in law.
神经科学技术的进展已获得越来越广泛的应用,包括在法律神经科学(或“神经法学”)领域,脑科学专家被传唤到法庭作证。但是,神经科学侵入法律领域是否对个人自由构成威胁?针对此类威胁有哪些法律保护措施?在本文中,我们概述了与神经科学方法相互作用的个人权利。然后,我们着手研究神经科学证据的当前用途,并最终确定个人权利是否受到此类方法的威胁。基于我们的分析,我们得出结论,虽然联邦证据规则对神经科学证据的使用构成了重大障碍,但需要更多的道德保障措施来防止未来对基本权利的侵犯。最后,我们断言,法律界和神经科学界越来越有必要共同努力,以更好地界定适用于法律的神经科学方法的限度、能力和预期方向。