Freethinking: Protecting Freedom of Thought Amidst the New Battle for the Mind
By (Author) Simon McCarthy-Jones
Oneworld Publications
Oneworld Publications
3rd January 2024
5th October 2023
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Popular psychology
Political control and freedoms
Cognitive and behavioural neuroscience
Human rights, civil rights
Law: Human rights and civil liberties
323.44
Hardback
416
Width 135mm, Height 216mm, Spine 35mm
Big Brother is watching usand mind control is, in a real sense, a reality. What are we going to do about it When one of his articles goes viral, Simon McCarthy-Jones finds himself, at all hours of the day and night, having the thought check Facebook. But was it really his thought How often do you think of something, only for your computer spookily to feed you just the right ad. Or Google a unique question, only for autocomplete to get there well ahead. In The Battle for Thought, psychologist Simon McCarthy-Jones unpicks the research into how our minds work and how its being used to manipulate us for corporate profit. He investigates what is meant by freedom of thought a human right frequently invoked, but rarely defined. In the face of radically advanced surveillance and mental manipulation, McCarthy-Jones shows that there are solutions: many of the sources of threats to our minds psychology, technology and government can also offer us new ways to protect our freedom of thought. We can structure society to support free thought, finding a way for science and technology, coupled with social and political will and supported by the law, to liberate and enhance our ability to think freely.
'Excellent and beyond timely. McCarthy-Jones seesthe right to freedom of thought as among other essential things the right to enquire,debate and protest, and theright not to be manipulated andlied to. He has identified a great challenge forour time - clarifying and asserting this right - and issued a clarion call to meetit.'
Impressive a wide-ranging study McCarthy-Jones offers a utopian vision of a "deep enlightenment" in which society is restructured, from its streets to its libraries, to improve conditions for free thought.
-- Literary ReviewSimon McCarthy-Jones is an Associate Professor in Clinical Psychology and Neuropsychology at Trinity College Dublin. An internationally recognised expert on the experience of hallucinations, he also writes on and researches a range of psychological phenomena and is the author of Spite. He has written extensively for the popular press, with articles published in the New Statesman, New Scientist, Newsweek, the Huffington Post, the Daily Mail, the Independent and the Irish Times. His articles on The Conversation website have received over a million views to date. His website is: www.simonmccarthyjones.com.