The Lie Detectors: The History of an American Obsession

Front Cover
U of Nebraska Press, Jan 1, 2009 - Social Science - 334 pages
In this fascinating history of the lie detector, Ken Alder exposes some persistent truths about our culture: why we long to know the secret thoughts of our fellow citizens; why we believe in popular science; and why we embrace ?truthiness.? For centuries people searched in vain for a way to unmask liars, seeking clues in the body?s outward signs: in blushing cheeks and shifty eyes. Not until the 1920s did a cop with a PhD team up with an entrepreneurial high school student and claim to have invented a foolproof machine capable of peering directly into the human heart. Scientists repudiated the technique, and judges banned its results from criminal trials, but in a few years their polygraph had transformed police work, seized headlines, and enthralled the nation.ø
In this book, Alder explains why America?and only America?has embraced this mechanical method of reading the human soul. Over the course of the twentieth century, the lie detector became integral to our justice system, employment markets, and national security apparatus, transforming each into a game of bluff and bluster. The lie detector device may not reliably read the human mind, but this lively account shows that the instrument?s history offers a unique window into the American soul.
 

Contents

II
3
III
17
IV
29
V
39
VI
55
VII
75
VIII
87
IX
89
XV
181
XVI
197
XVII
215
XVIII
229
XIX
243
XX
251
XXI
269
XXII
279

X
103
XI
119
XII
139
XIII
155
XIV
163
XXIII
313
XXIV
319
XXV
321
XXVI
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2009)

Ken Alder is a professor of history and the Milton H. Wilson Professor in the Humanities at Northwestern University. He is the author of The Measure of All Things: The Seven-Year Odyssey and Hidden Error that Transformed the World and Engineering the Revolution.

Bibliographic information