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A Brief History of Human Torture

Ai Chuang

11K0

When the bronze bull torture instrument of ancient Rome transformed screams into beastly roars, when the iron maidens of the Middle Ages measured pain with 487 iron nails, and when the white noise chamber in Guantanamo Bay destroyed wills with decibel accuracy - the essence of human history of violence over the past three thousand years is actually the dark conspiracy of power and technology. With scalpel-like strokes, this book dissects the evolution from Aztec sacrificial knives to CIA waterboarding: revealing how Shang Dynasty's cannon-burning torture turned human oil into a totem of domination, restoring the humiliating art of using honey to attract wasps in the Spanish Inquisition, and dismantling how modern sleep deprivation chambers use brainwave frequencies to replace iron nails. Through the acoustic pipeline of the bronze bull torture instrument, the symbol system of the religious trial, and the data model of the anti-terrorism interrogation, a truth that subverts cognition is revealed - torture has never died, but has just transferred from the bloody theater to the neural circuit. When you slide the war live broadcast in front of the screen, you are sharing the same violent gene with the Roman audience in the Colosseum. This book will take you to salvage forgotten screams in the folds of civilization. These sounds will eventually become a yardstick for measuring the height of human nature.