In George Orwell's dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four the government attempts to control not only the speech and actions, but also the thoughts of its subjects, labeling disapproved thoughts with the term thoughtcrime or, in Newspeak, "crimethink".
In the book, Winston Smith, the main character, writes in his diary: "Thoughtcrime does not entail death: thoughtcrime is death."
Thought Police
The
Thought Police (
thinkpol in Newspeak) are the
secret police of the novel
Nineteen Eighty-Four whose job it is to uncover and punish
thoughtcrime. The Thought Police use
psychology and omnipresent
surveillance to find and eliminate members of society who are capable of the mere thought of challenging ruling authority.
Orwell's Thought Police and their pursuit of thoughtcrime were based on the methods used by the totalitarian states and competing ideologies of the 20th century. It also had much to do with Orwell's own "power of facing unpleasant facts," as he called it, and his willingness to criticize prevailing ideas which brought him into conflict with others and their "smelly little orthodoxies." Although Orwell described himself as a democratic socialist, many other socialists (especially those who supported the communist branch of socialism) thought that his criticism of the Soviet Union under Stalin damaged the socialist cause.
The term "Thought Police," by extension, has come to refer to real or perceived enforcement of ideological correctness in any modern or historical contexts.
Technology and thoughtcrime
Just as technology played a significant part in the detection of
thoughtcrime in
Nineteen Eighty-Four — with the ubiquitous
telescreens which could inform the government, misinform and monitor the population — a number of technologies have been developed to try to detect thought and emotional states. There are attempts to create image-recognition software that detects possible wrongdoers by looking for signs of anxiety. Other technologies range from
lie detectors, the
penile plethysmograph which was used to try to detect "homosexual or pedophile thoughts", and on to more modern attempts to use
magnetic resonance imaging to try to detect brain chemical activity supposedly corresponding to memory or thoughts. All of these technologies have been proposed at one time or another as a way of detecting "bad thoughts".
See also
Further reading
- Kretzmer, David and Kershman, Hazan Francine (Eds.) (2000) "Freedom of Speech and Incitement Against Democracy". Kluwer Law International, The Hague, Netherlands. ISBN 90-411-1341-X
External links
- Cunningham & Cunningham, Inc. " Thought Crime".
- The Essayist, " Hate Crime Premise" July 24, 1998.
- Evenson, Brad, " Looking for thoughtcrime to crimestop". National Post, February 08, 2003.
- Peabody, Michael " Thought & Crime," Liberty Magazine, March/April 2008.
- Reuters, " Thoughtcrime a Reality: U.S. Toughens Child Pornography Law". October 2, 1996.
- Guardian report: MPs criticise lock-up plan for mentally ill. July 25, 2000.
- Michael David Crawford: " My Deepest Fear" September 6, 2006.