Archer Alfred
Tilburg University, Tilburg, The Netherlands.
J Med Philos. 2018 Sep 5;43(5):490-505. doi: 10.1093/jmp/jhy017.
Suppose, we could take a pill that would turn us into morally better people. Would we have a duty to take such a pill? In recent years, a number of philosophers have discussed this issue. Most prominently, Ingmar Persson and Julian Savulescu have argued that we would have a duty to take such a pill. In this article, I wish to investigate the possible limits of a duty to take moral enhancement drugs through investigating the related question of whether it would be desirable to create a world populated entirely with morally perfect people. I argue, drawing on the work of Bernard Williams, Susan Wolf, and Michael Slote, that we have reason to be grateful that we do not live a world in which everyone is morally perfect, as this would prevent people from dedicating their lives to valuable nonmoral projects. I then argue that this thought should serve as a limitation on attempts to morally improve people through the use of technology. Finally, I explore the implications of this discussion for some of the less ambitious forms of moral enhancement currently being explored in the literature. I argue that these forms of enhancement give us no reason to worry about preventing valuable, morally imperfect ways of life. In fact, by acting as a shortcut to moral development, they might serve as an aid to help people fulfill valuable nonmoral goals in a way that is morally permissible.
假设我们能服用一种药丸,使我们在道德上变得更完善。我们有义务服用这种药丸吗?近年来,许多哲学家都讨论过这个问题。最突出的是,英格玛·珀尔松和朱利安·萨夫勒斯库认为我们有义务服用这种药丸。在本文中,我希望通过研究一个相关问题来探讨服用道德增强药物的义务可能存在的限度,即创造一个完全由道德完美的人组成的世界是否可取。我借鉴伯纳德·威廉姆斯、苏珊·沃尔夫和迈克尔·斯洛特的著作进行论证,我们有理由庆幸自己并非生活在一个每个人在道德上都完美的世界,因为这会阻碍人们将生命奉献给有价值的非道德事业。然后我认为,这一观点应成为通过技术手段在道德上提升人们的尝试的一种限制。最后,我探讨了这一讨论对目前文献中正在探索的一些不那么雄心勃勃的道德增强形式的影响。我认为这些增强形式不会让我们有理由担心会阻碍有价值的、道德上不完美的生活方式。事实上,作为道德发展的一条捷径,它们可能有助于人们以道德上允许的方式实现有价值的非道德目标。