MORAL NEUROENHANCEMENT
- PMID: 29630194
- Bookshelf ID: NBK493126
MORAL NEUROENHANCEMENT
Excerpt
In recent years, philosophers, neuroethicists, and others have become preoccupied with “moral enhancement.” Very roughly, this refers to the deliberate moral improvement of an individual’s character, motives, or behavior. In one sense, such enhancement could be seen as “nothing new at all” (Wiseman, 2016, 4) or as something philosophically mundane: as G. Owen Schaefer (2015) has stated, “Moral enhancement is an ostensibly laudable project. … Who wouldn’t want people to become more moral?” (261). To be sure, humans have long sought to morally enhance themselves (and their children) through such largely uncontroversial means as moral education, meditation or other “spiritual” practices, engagement with moral ideas in literature, philosophy, or religion, and discussion of moral controversies with others. What is different about the recent debate is that it focuses on a new set of potential tools for fostering such enhancement, which might broadly be described as “neurotechnologies.” These technologies, assuming that they worked, would work by altering certain brain states or neural functions directly, in such a way as to bring about the desired moral improvement.
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Further Reading
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- DeGrazia, D. (2014) “Moral enhancement, freedom, and what we (should) value in moral behaviour”. Journal of Medical Ethics 40(6), 361–368. - PubMed
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- Harris, J. (2016) How to Be Good. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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- Persson, I. and Savulescu, J. (2012) Unfit for the Future: The Need for Moral Enhancement. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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- Sparrow, R. (2014) “Better Living Through Chemistry? A Reply to Savulescu and Persson on Moral Enhancement”. Journal of Applied Philosophy 31(1), 23–32.
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- Wiseman, H. (2016) The Myth of the Moral Brain: The Limits of Moral Enhancement. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
References
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- Agar, N. (2010) Enhancing genetic virtue? Politics and the Life Sciences 29(1): pp. 73–75. - PubMed
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- Agar, N. (2013) A question about defining moral bioenhancement. Journal of Medical Ethics 40(6): pp. 369–370. - PubMed
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- Archer, A. (2016) Moral enhancement and those left behind. Bioethics. Available online ahead of print at: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/bioe.12251/full - DOI - PubMed
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- Baron-Cohen, S. (2011) Autism, empathizing-systemizing (e-s) theory, and pathological altruism. In Oakley B., Knafo A., Madhaven G., and Wilson D.S. (Eds.). Pathological Altruism. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 344–348.
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- Bartz, J.A., Zaki, J., Bolger, N., and Ochsner, K.N. (2011) Social effects of oxytocin in humans: Context and person matter. Trends in Cognitive Sciences 15(7): pp. 301–309. - PubMed
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