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Alder, Ken. The Lie Detectors: The history of an american obsession. New York: Free Press, 2007. 
Added by: joachim (15/11/2014, 14:50)   
Resource type: Book
Language: en: English
ID no. (ISBN etc.): 0743259882
BibTeX citation key: Alder2007
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Categories: General
Keywords: "Wonder Woman", Marston. William Moulton, Superhero, USA
Creators: Alder
Publisher: Free Press (New York)
Views: 9/831
Attachments   URLs   http://www.kenalde ... etectors/index.htm
Abstract
The story of the lie detector takes us straight into the dark recesses of the American soul. It also leads us on a noir journey through some of the most storied episodes in American history. That is because the device we take for granted as an indicator of guilt or innocence actually tells us more about our beliefs than our deeds. The machine does not measure deception so much as feelings of guilt or shame. As Ken Alder reveals in his fascinating and disturbing account, the history of the lie detector exposes fundamental truths about our culture: why we long to know the secret thoughts of our co-citizens; why we believe in popular science; and why America embraced the culture of “truthiness.”
For centuries, human beings had searched in vain for a way to unmask liars, seeking clues in blushing cheeks, shifty eyes, and curling toes…, all the body’s outward signs. But not until the 1920s did a cop with a Ph.D. team up with an entrepreneurial high school student from Berkeley, California and claim to have invented a foolproof machine that peered directly into the human heart. In a few short years their polygraph had transformed police work, seized headlines, solved sensational murders, and enthralled the nation. In Chicago, the capital of American vice, the two men wielded their device to clean up corruption, reform the police, and probe the minds of infamous murderers. Before long the lie detector had become the nation’s “mechanical conscience,” searching for honesty on Main Street, in Hollywood, and even within Washington D.C. Husbands and wives tested each other’s fidelity. Corporations tested their employees’ honesty. Movie studios and advertisers tested their audiences’ responses. Eventually, thousands of government employees were tested for their loyalty and “morals”—for lack of which, many lost their jobs.
Yet the machine was flawed. It often was used to accuse the wrong person. It could easily be beaten by those who knew how. Repeatedly it has been wielded as an instrument of psychological torture, with the goal of extracting confessions. And its creators paid a commensurate price. One went mad trying to destroy the Frankenstein’s monster he had created. The other became consumed by mistrust: jealous of his cheating wife, contemptuous of his former mentor, and driven to an early death. The only happy man among the machine’s champions was the eccentric psychologist who went on to achieve glory as the creator of Wonder Woman.
Yet this deceptive device took America—and only America—by storm. Today, the CIA still administers polygraphs to its employees. Accused celebrities loudly trumpet its clean bill of truth. And the U.S. government, as part of its new “war on terror,” is currently exploring forms of lie detection that reach directly into the brain. Apparently, America still dreams of a technology that will render human beings transparent.

Table of Contents

Preface (xi)

PART 1: THE ATHENS OF THE PACIFIC (1)
1. “Science Nabs Sorority Sneak” (3)
2. Policing the Polis (17)
3. A Window on the Soul (29)
4. Monsterwork and Son (39)
5. The Simple Home (55)
6. Poisonville (63)
7. “Subjective and Objective, Sir” (75)

PART 2: IF THE TRUTH CAME TO CHICAGO (87)
8. The City of Clinical Material (89)
9. Machine v. Machine (103)
10. Testing, Testing (119)
11. Traces (139)
12. A Science of the Singular (155)
13. Fidelity (163)

PART 3: TRUTH, JUSTICE, AND THE AMERICAN LIE DETECTOR (179)
14. A Lie Detector of Curves and Muscle (181)
15. Atomic Lies (197)
16. Pinkos (215)
17. Deus Ex Machina (229)
18. Frankenstein Lives! (243)
19. Box Populi (251)

Epilogue (269)

Note on Sources (273)
Notes (279)
Selected Biblography (313)
Acknowledgments (319)
Index (321)


  
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