Magnetic Waves Can Change Your Perception Of Morality


You don't say:

Scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology say such a device allowed them to observe the effects magnetic rays have on a person's sense of morality.



In a new study, volunteers were subjected to magnetic pulses just above and behind of the right ear, focusing on the area of the brain believed to be the area controlling morality. The pulses were intended to block cell activity that contributed to the volunteers' sense of right and wrong.




[snip]




To see what effect a 500 millisecond magnetic pulse had, researchers gave the 20 volunteers a series of tests. In one test, the volunteers were given an ethical dilemma: should a man let his girlfriend walk across a bridge he knew wasn't safe?




The volunteers based their answers on how the scenario played out. If the girlfriend crossed with bridge safely, the man wasn't at fault. The volunteers based their decision on the outcome of the dilemma, not the moral principle, because of the magnetic pulse, the researchers wrote.


I think we have the premise for the next Marvel crossover!

(Oh, and I love how Captain America is the only one who looks scared in that pic; I mean the other two guys are "Iron Man" and Wolverine, aka, "My-Bones-Are-Laced-With-Metal." Shouldn't they be the ones pissing on their pants?)

Comments

Wolverine aint scared of nothin'. Which is sometimes kind of stupid on his part.
Pryme said…
@Dave: I just read Parts 2 and 3 of World War Hulk: X-Men online and there wasn't an ass the green guy didn't kick, including Wolverine's (let's just say he got punch drunk).

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