Military Review English Edition January-February 2015 | Page 100
Notes
Epigraph. P.W. Singer, “The Ethics of Killer Applications:
Why Is It So Hard To Talk About Morality When It Comes to
New Military Technology?” Journal of Military Ethics, 9(4)(December 2010): 299, http://www.brookings.edu/~/media/research/
files/papers/2010/12/robotics%20ethics%20singer/12_robotics_ethics_singer.pdf (accessed 24 November 2014).
1. Patrick Lin, “More Than Human? The Ethics of Biologically
Enhancing Soldiers,” The Atlantic.com, 16 February 2012, http://
www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2012/02/more-than-human-the-ethics-of-biologically-enhancing-Soldiers/253217/
(accessed 1 October 2014).
2. United States Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory
report, Cognition-Enhancing Drugs and Their Appropriateness for
Aviation and Ground Troops: A Meta-Analysis, USAARL Report
No. 2011-06, Amanda Kelley et al., (Fort Detrick, MD: U.S. Army
Medical Research and Materiel Command: December 2010), 1,
http://www.usaarl.army.mil/TechReports/2011-06.pdf (accessed
24 November 2014).
3. Oxford Dictionaries Online, s.v. “enhancement,” http://oxforddictionaries.com (accessed 23 October 2014).
4. Patrick Lin.
5. Nicolas Rasmussen, On Speed: The Many Lives of Amphetamine (New York, NY: New York University Press, 2008).
6. Franklin D. Jones “Sanctioned Use of Drugs in Combat,” in
ed. P. Pichot et al, Psychiatry: The State of the Art: Vol. 6, Drug Dependence and Alcoholism, Forensic Psychiatry, Military Psychiatry,
(New York, NY: Plenum Publishing Company, 1985): 489–494;
cited in Harris R. Lieberman, Jessica Cail, and Karl E. Friedl, “Performance-Maintaining and Performance-Enhancing Drugs and
Food Components,” in Military Quantitative Physiology: Problems
and Concepts in Military Operational Medicine, ed. Martha K.
Lenhart, (Fort Detrick, MD: Office of the Surgeon General, Department of the Army, Borden Institute, 2012), 106-107, https://
ke.army.mil/bordeninstitute/published_volumes/mil_quantitative_physiology/QPchapter04.pdf (accessed 1 October 2014).
7. Andreas Ulrich, trans. Christopher Sultan, “The Nazi
Death Machine: Hitler’s Drugged Soldiers,” Der Spiegel Online
International, 6 May 2005, http://www.spiegel.de/international/
the-nazi-death-machine-hitler-s-drugged-soldiers-a-354606.html
(accessed 28 October 2014).
8. Ibid.
9. Ibid.
10. Ibid.
11. Ibid.
12. Ibid.
13. Ibid.
14. Harris R. Lieberman, Jessica Cail, and Karl E. Friedl.
15. Ibid.
16. Ibid.
17. Marc Galanter and Herbert D. Kleber “Treatment of
Acute Intoxication and Withdrawal from Drugs of Abuse,” 1,
adapted or excerpted from The American Psychiatric Publishing
Textbook of Substance Abuse Treatment, second edition, Marc
Galanter and Herbert D. Kleber ed. (Arlington, VA: American
Psychiatric Publishing, Inc., 1999) http://www.chce.research.
98
va.gov/docs/pdfs/Doaacutetreatment.pdf (accessed 29 October
2014).
18. William D. Casebeer, “Ethics and the Biologized
Battlefield: Moral Issues in 21st-century Conflict,” In Bio-Inspired Innovation and National Security, Robert E. Armstrong et al. (Washington D.C.: National Defense University
Press, 2004), chapter 20, 295, http://mercury.ethz.ch/serviceengine/Files/ISN/137626/ichaptersection_s