The Ethics of Human Enhancement: Understanding the Debate.

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Please enter recipient e-mail address es. The E-mail Address es you entered is are not in a valid format. Please re-enter recipient e-mail address es. Told that there are permanently unconscious human beings trapped in a burning building, on the strength of that fact alone we mobilise as many resources as we can to rescue them Savulescu, , p.

Partiality

Consider now two further cases. In the first, we must compare the reasons we have to save a human non-person with the reasons we have to save a non-human person: A permanently unconscious human being is trapped in one room of a burning building. A benevolent extra-terrestrial who exhibits all the capacities associated with personhood is trapped in another. You only have time to save one. Crucially though, it is not clear that it is best to construe our moral reason here as a reason of partiality.

As we suggested above, we can understand a reason of partiality to be a distinctive kind of reason that has its source in a non-instrumentally valued attachment. However, when we choose to save the person in case one, our reason to do so does not seem to stem at least not primarily from the fact that we value our membership of the group that contains all and only persons; rather, in this case, our reason to save the person stems directly from the value of the person herself.

However, the fact that our moral reasons in these cases are not grounded by reasons of partiality to humanity does not entail that such reasons cannot ever obtain.

Partiality for Humanity and Enhancement - The Ethics of Human Enhancement - NCBI Bookshelf

To see why, consider a case in which we must compare the reason we have to save a human person with the reason we have to save a non-human person. A human person is trapped in one room of a burning building. In this case, it at least seems plausible to claim that one might permissibly choose to save the human person rather than the non-human person.

Suppose that this is so. Assuming this is the case, this example suggests that there may yet be scope for a reasonable partiality for humanity that goes beyond the moral reasons that we have to treat persons in certain ways.

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Case one shows that we have strong moral reasons that, as McMahan , p. However, in case two, in so far as we might justifiably choose to save the human person rather than the non-human person, the moral reason to do so is not derived from the same set of considerations. Rather, our reason to do so seems to derive from extrinsic relational factors, or from what we are calling a reason of partiality for humanity.

On this account, it is not membership of a species per se that in non-instrumentally valuable; as McMahan, also argues, it is difficult to see how this could be morally significant in any way.


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Rather, what may be understood to ground the non-instrumental value of our membership of the human species is the contingent fact that we as a species have shared a common cultural and biological history with and crucially only with other members of our species in developing the valuable capabilities that humans instantiate.

Although we share parts of our biological history with other species such as chimpanzees , what makes our shared history with other humans special is that only other humans have shared in the part of our history over the course of which we have developed and exercised the very capacities that separate us from other animals. If this is coherent, then there may be some basis for reasonable partiality to humanity that might provide us with sufficient moral justification to save a human person rather than a human non-person in a situation where we have to choose between saving one or the other.

However, this partiality provides only very weak reasons; indeed it might be claimed that moral reasons that derive from a consideration of the intrinsic properties of other beings might be understood to take lexical priority over our reasons of partiality that are grounded on the non-instrumental value of our attachments. McMahan seems to endorse this sort of view. The view of reasonable partiality for humanity that we have outlined here is influenced by the arguments of Williams and Cohen that we explored in section I. First, reasons of partiality are a familiar element of many plausible moral theories; as such, in appealing to such reasons, we do not need to appeal to a novel and controversial form of valuing as Cohen does.

Whilst they give us moral reasons to favour human beings in our moral deliberations, these reasons only obtain if we have already met our more stringent moral duties to non-human persons that are generated by the value of personhood. It seems that a suitably developed account of this sketch of reasonable partiality for humanity could provide a theoretical foundation for an objection to human enhancement technologies that would be superior to many existing bioconservative objections that appeal to the concept of human nature.

An objection grounded in partiality for humanity offers bioconservatives a way of providing a determinate account of what we have reasons to preserve about human beings, without facing the standard problem of explaining how certain relatively contingent and arbitrary features of the human species, selected as they were by a blind evolutionary process, can generate such reasons. On an objection based on the account of partiality illustrated above, the human features that we have reasons to preserve are not understood to be intrinsically valuable in the somewhat implausible manner that other bioconservative objections have claimed; rather, we are understood to have reasons to preserve certain features by virtue of the non-instrumental but extrinsic value that these features bear.

The extrinsic value they bear is grounded by the fact that these features are the product of our shared biological and cultural history. Moreover, unlike other objections to human enhancement that appeal to the intrinsic value of human nature, the objection from reasonable partiality is not committed to the claim that changing human nature must necessarily involve a change for the worse.

The thrust of the objection is that even if changing human nature might in some ways be a change for the better, we can nonetheless have reasons to refrain from making such changes. On the account of partiality outlined above, the reasons at work here are reasons of partiality for humanity grounded in the non-instrumental value of the characteristics that we as a species have developed over a shared cultural and biological history.

However, even if we assume that reasonable partiality for humanity is a plausible position, there are some remaining concerns about whether it can be developed into a successful anti-enhancement argument. The first problem is that on the account outlined above, reasons of partiality are relatively weak, and are lexically inferior to the moral reasons generated by the value of personhood.

As such, if it can be argued that certain enhancements are necessary to safeguard the moral value of persons, reasons of partiality to humanity would not be sufficiently strong to rule out the moral permissibility of enhancement. Indeed, one of us has argued elsewhere that as our technological capabilities continue to expand, there is an increasing probability that a small group of individuals could destroy the human race, and that the only way to prevent this from happening may be to use technological means to morally enhance the species Persson and Savulescu, A second problem with a partiality-based objection to enhancement technologies is that it is not clear that reasons of partiality to humanity can ground a strong objection to forms of enhancement that seek to preserve what is valuable about human beings.

Life-extension technologies thus seem to preserve much of what we value in being human rather than replace it with something else. We have suggested that an appeal to reasonable partiality could ground a limited form of objection to human enhancement technologies. We have provided a brief sketch of what a plausible value-based account of reasonable partiality for humanity might involve, suggesting that reasonable partiality for humanity could be grounded by the non-instrumental extrinsic value of the, cultural and biological history that we share with all and only other members of the species Homo Sapiens.

We suggested that an objection to human enhancement based on these accounts of partiality has several advantages over common bioconservative objections to human enhancement that appeal to the value of human nature, and the objections that can be drawn from the arguments of Williams and Cohen.

Having said this, since reasons of partiality can ground only weak moral reasons, there are some remaining concerns about whether a view of partiality for humanity can be developed into a successful anti enhancement argument. We have provided only a brief sketch of how one might give an account of the non-instrumental value of being a member of the human species by appealing to the shared cultural and biological history of our species. However, such an account requires further defence than we can provide here.

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Indeed, it is telling that both Cottingham and Scheffler are sceptical of whether we can make sense of reasonable partiality for humanity on their value-based account. If an account of partiality for humanity cannot stand up to critical scrutiny, even the weak objections to enhancement that we discussed above may simply amount to conclusions that follow from an irrational and morally despicable bias for humanity that is on par with sexism and racism.

See also Annas ; Habermas One might advance the stronger claim that morality might even oblige us to be partial to certain individuals in our moral deliberations. Cohen often writes in a way that gives the impression that when we value particulars in this way, we are responding to a special kind of value that goes beyond the intrinsic value they possess. But the claim is better understood as a claim about how we should properly respond to the intrinsic value possessed by particular things. See also Bostrom and Ord, However, see Nebel for an argument that the status quo bias can be rational on conservative theories.

And as the examples we discuss below show, it is the moral significance of personhood seems to vastly outweigh the possible further significance of being human, once personhood is set aside. Notice that Hurka , pp. Coady, Alberto Giubilini, and Sagar Sanyal. Monographs, or book chapters, which are outputs of Wellcome Trust funding have been made freely available as part of the Wellcome Trust's open access policy.

Turn recording back on. National Center for Biotechnology Information , U. Oxford University Press ; Dec. On this view, human beings are not understood to have importance in some cosmic, absolute sense; rather they simply have importance for human beings.

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He then suggests that this example suggests that the particular and personal modes of valuing delineated above correspond to a distinction alluded to above between: Although Williams does not directly discuss radical forms of enhancement that aim to eradicate flaws inherent in human nature—moral enhancement being a clear example—it seems eminently plausible to expect that he would regard such a project as falling within the scope of his critical remark.

It is bound to attract a great deal of attention. Table of contents Preface xi Chapter 1: Introduction 1 Chapter 2: Concernment 22 Chapter 5: Consciousness 30 Chapter 6: Consciousness Is Not Memory 72 Chapter Personal Identity 77 Chapter Psychological Connectedness 88 Chapter Transition Butler Dismissed 93 Chapter Personal Identity without Substantial Continuity 97 Chapter A Fatal Error of Locke's?

The Distinction between [P] and [S] Chapter Concernment and Repentance Chapter Conclusion Postface Appendix 1: A Defence of Mr. Review quote "[E]legant and provocative There is no denying that the case he makes in this short but compelling book is a powerful one. His many books include "Freedom and Belief" and "Selves: