Abstract
AbstractThe human enhancement debate has over the last few decades been concerned with ethical issues in methods for improving the physical, cognitive, or emotive states of individual people, and of the human species as a whole. Arguments in favour of enhancement defend it as a paradigm of rationality, presenting it as a clear-eyed, logical defence of what we stand to gain from transcending the typical limits of our species. If these arguments are correct, it appears that adults should in principle be able to make rational and informed decisions about enhancing themselves. In this paper, however, we suggest that a rational and informed choice to enhance oneself may in some cases be impossible. Drawing on L. A. Paul’s work on ‘transformative experience’, we argue that some enhancements—such as certain moral or cognitive modifications—may give rise to unbridgeable epistemic gaps in key domains. Importantly, such gaps could prove to be not merely contingently unbridgeable due to a lack of information at a given moment, but radically unbridgeable, making someone in a non-enhanced state inherently unable to conceive of what it would be like to be enhanced in a particular way. Where this experience is key to understanding what values are being pursued by the enhancement itself, it may prove impossible for a person to be sufficiently informed, and to make a rational decision about whether or not to enhance herself. This poses a challenge for human enhancement proponents in general, and for transhumanists in particular.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Management of Technology and Innovation,Health Policy,Issues, ethics and legal aspects,Health (social science)
Reference53 articles.
1. Agar, N. (2014). Truly human enhancement. A philosophical defense of limits.
2. Aldrin, B., & Abraham, K. (2010). Magnificent desolation: The long journey home from the moon. Three Rivers Press.
3. Barnes, E. (2016). Reply to Guy Kahane and Julian Savulescu. Res Philosophica, 93(1), 295–309.
4. Benedikter, R., & Fathi, K. (2019). The future of the human mind: Techno-anthropological hybridization? Challenge, 62(1), 77–95.
5. Bjørnvig, T. (2013). Outer space religion and the overview effect: A critical inquiry into a classic of the pro-space movement. Astropolitics, 11(1–2), 4–24.
Cited by
4 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献