| Literature DB >> 25227512 |
Jona Specker1, Farah Focquaert, Kasper Raus, Sigrid Sterckx, Maartje Schermer.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The debate on the ethical aspects of moral bioenhancement focuses on the desirability of using biomedical as opposed to traditional means to achieve moral betterment. The aim of this paper is to systematically review the ethical reasons presented in the literature for and against moral bioenhancement. DISCUSSION: A review was performed and resulted in the inclusion of 85 articles. We classified the arguments used in those articles in the following six clusters: (1) why we (don't) need moral bioenhancement, (2) it will (not) be possible to reach consensus on what moral bioenhancement should involve, (3) the feasibility of moral bioenhancement and the status of current scientific research, (4) means and processes of arriving at moral improvement matter ethically, (5) arguments related to the freedom, identity and autonomy of the individual, and (6) arguments related to social/group effects and dynamics. We discuss each argument separately, and assess the debate as a whole. First, there is little discussion on what distinguishes moral bioenhancement from treatment of pathological deficiencies in morality. Furthermore, remarkably little attention has been paid so far to the safety, risks and side-effects of moral enhancement, including the risk of identity changes. Finally, many authors overestimate the scientific as well as the practical feasibility of the interventions they discuss, rendering the debate too speculative.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25227512 PMCID: PMC4274726 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6939-15-67
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
Search terms and strings
| (morality/de AND ('genetic enhancement'/de OR 'medical technology'/de OR 'neurosurgery'/de)) OR (((moral* OR virtue* OR virtuous OR biomedical* OR bio-medical) NEAR/6 (enhanc* OR bioenhanc* OR manipulat*))):ab,ti | |
| ((morals/ OR Moral Development/ OR Virtues/) AND ("Genetic Engineering"/OR exp "Biomedical Enhancement"/OR "neurosurgery"/)) OR (((moral* OR virtue* OR virtuous OR biomedical* OR bio-medical) ADJ6 (enhanc* OR bioenhanc* OR manipulat*))).ab,ti. | |
| TS = (((moral* OR virtue* OR virtuous OR biomedical* OR bio-medical) NEAR/6 (enhanc* OR bioenhanc* OR manipulat*))) | |
| ((morality/OR Moral Development/OR Virtue/) AND ("Genetic Engineering"/OR "neurosurgery"/)) OR (((moral* OR virtue* OR virtuous OR biomedical* OR bio-medical) ADJ6 (enhanc* OR bioenhanc* OR manipulat*))).ab,ti. | |
| (Moral enhanc*[tiab] OR Moral bioenhanc*[tiab]) NOT medline[sb] | |
| TITLE-ABS-KEY(((moral* OR biomedical* OR bio-medical) W/3 (enhanc* OR bioenhanc*)) AND (ethic* OR bioethic*)) | |
| "moral (enhancement|bioenhancement|enhancing)"|"moral bio enhancement" | |
| "Moral enhancement" OR "Moral bioenhancement" |
Selection of publications
| 1027 | 1008 | |
| 820 | 178 | |
| 1191 | 788 | |
| 449 | 261 | |
| 427 | 253 | |
| 17 | 10 | |
| 192 | 142 | |
| 75 | 58 | |
| 5 | 3 | |
| 4203 | 2701 |
Arguments for and against moral bioenhancement, presented in the reviewed literature
| | There is scope for improvement | Almost by definition, each person can be/act/behave better. We therefore all have a moral duty/imperative/reasons to enhance ourselves. We have good reasons for wanting to better ourselves. Also: a duty to do the right thing. | [ |
| | Human biological nature is defective | Humans are innately evil. Evil cannot be eradicated by socialization and education alone. Or: humans are innately good. | [ |
| | Traditional means are (not) effective enough | Such as education, upbringing, socialization. These will only bring us so far. Or: they do suffice, are attractive and effective. | [ |
| | Our only hope in averting major disaster | Avoidance of ultimate harm. Some of the world’s most important problems can be attributed to moral deficits of individuals. Or: those problems have other causes besides the moral deficits of individuals. Moral enhancement should accompany, or even precede/ prioritize over cognitive enhancement and scientific progress. | [ |
| | Moral bioenhancement might reduce criminality | Promise of solving immoral and criminal acts. Or: warning that these are not necessarily the same. | [ |
| | No consensus on the mechanisms that comprise our moral psychology | The way we should interpret neurobiological findings. | [ |
| | Behavioral changes alone are (not) enough | Emotions versus moral reasoning. Dependent on view on what is considered worthy of moral appraisal. Behavioral control, or: certain attitudes towards behavior are also necessary (they have cognitive content). | [ |
| | Ethical systems and theories differ and often disagree | Subjectivity of/disagreement between main (substantive) moral theories. Individuals and cultures differ, there is moral pluralism. Possibility of being neutral between different conceptions of the good. | [ |
| | (Im)possibility of considerable consensus | The question whether we can find a common ground, despite moral pluralism. Also: discussions on relativism/nihilism, objectivism. | [ |
| | Situation- and role-dependency | Situation dependency of what counts as an improvement (morally). Different roles, assessments of situations. Weighing relevant reasons to act. One virtue can turn into a vice dependent on the situation. | [ |
| | Human enhancement versus treating mental disorders | Enhancing humanity or treating mental disorders. Moral element in mental disorders. | [ |
| | Status of current scientific research | Further research is needed or, technological possibilities are already there. | [ |
| | Complexity of our moral psychology/biology | Makes it doubtful that we will gain sufficient understanding. | [ |
| Is morality genetically/biologically determined? For example: are virtues and vices heritable? Is the core of our moral dispositions malleable by biomedical and genetic means? Danger of reductionism: we should not overlook the impact of the socio-cultural environment. | |||
| | Unintended or undesirable side effects | Interventions have effects beyond the intended effects (also: bluntness of the instruments). | [ |
| A ‘baby and bathwater’ problem. | |||
| Moral bioenhancement might even lead to the opposite: not moral progress but moral decline. | |||
| | Scientific rigor, standards | Research ethical questions about standards of good/sound science. Is scientific experimentation permissible, given that ‘lack of moral virtue’ is not a disease? | [ |
| | Other (non-biomedical) methods are preferable | Such as moral training, socialization or (self-) education. Taking a pill might seem ‘all too easy’ or too disconnected from ordinary human understanding. Are biomedical means intrinsically bad? Also: man is not supposed to play God. | [ |
| | There is no principled difference between traditional and biomedical means | Results matter, the means less so. | [ |
| Perhaps the difference lies in the irrevocability/irreversibility of biomedical means. | |||
| | Moral bioenhancement might threaten the freedom of the individual | Moral bioenhancement might impair our freedom and diminish our freedom to act on bad motives. It might subvert moral agency. | [ |
| | Moral bioenhancement might endanger our identity and autonomy | Questions about personal identity, and ‘true’ versus ‘brute’ self. | [ |
| Enhancer decides on outcome of moral bioenhancement (paternalism). Might compromise autonomous, informed choice. | |||
| | Despite concerns about individual liberty and autonomy, a trade-off is justified | The advantages outweigh the disadvantages. | [ |
| | Moral bioenhancement benefits others | Unlike other types of enhancements (cognitive, cosmetic, sports). Or: who benefits? The individual or society as a whole? | [ |
| | Moral bioenhancement might foster abuse | Moral bioenhancement might induce free-riding (e.g. prisoner’s dilemma). The virtuous exposed to exploitation by the vicious. It may lead to moral decline. | [ |
| | Moral bioenhancement might undermine moral diversity and moral debate | It might diminish opportunities for ethical thinking/debate. Reasonable pluralism. Moral bioenhancement might generate social inequalities, elitism. | [ |
| | Risks of utopian derailing | Progressive, well-intended, yet… | [ |
| Utopian. | |||
| Interventions will be used recklessly or overenthusiastically. Moral perfectionism. | |||
| Mandatory implementation or free/parental choice | State neutrality versus free choice. Danger of tyranny/discrimination. | [ | |