The Ethics of Neuroenhancement

Nils-Frederic Wagner, Jeffrey Robinson, C. Wiebking
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Abstract

According to several recent studies, a big chunk of college students in North America and Europe uses so called ‘smart drugs' to enhance their cognitive capacities aiming at improving their academic performance. With these practices, there comes a certain moral unease. This unease is shared by many, yet it is difficult to pinpoint and in need of justification. Other than simply pointing to the medical risks coming along with using non-prescribed medication, the salient moral question is whether these practices are troubling in and of themselves. In due consideration of empirical insights into the concrete effects of smart drugs on brain and behavior, our attempt is to articulate wherein this moral unease consists and to argue for why the authors believe cognitive enhancement to be morally objectionable. The authors will contend that the moral problem with these practices lies less in the end it seeks, than in the underlying human disposition it expresses and promotes. Some might ask, what is wrong with molding our cognitive capacities to achieve excellence, get a competitive edge, or, as the whim takes us? In all of these occasions, the usage of smart drugs serves a certain goal, a telos. The goal is, broadly speaking, this: outsmarting opponents in an arms race for limited resources and thereby yielding a competitive edge. In plain words: competition is valued higher than cooperation or solidarity. What is wrong with striving for this goal? The authors submit that the question whether people really want to live in a society that promotes the mentality ‘individual competition over societal cooperation' deserves serious consideration. In developing their answer, the authors draw on an ‘Ethics of Constraint' framework, arguing that widespread off-label use of smart drugs bears the risk of negative neural/behavioral consequences for the individual that might, in the long run, be accompanied by changing social value orientations for the worse.
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神经增强的伦理学
根据最近的几项研究,北美和欧洲的很大一部分大学生使用所谓的“聪明药”来增强他们的认知能力,旨在提高他们的学习成绩。这些做法带来了某种道德上的不安。许多人都有这种不安,但很难准确地指出,而且需要证明。除了简单地指出使用非处方药带来的医疗风险外,一个突出的道德问题是,这些做法本身是否会带来麻烦。在充分考虑到智能药物对大脑和行为的具体影响的经验见解后,我们试图阐明这种道德不安的构成,并论证为什么作者认为认知增强在道德上是令人反感的。作者认为,这些行为的道德问题不在于它所追求的最终目的,而在于它所表达和促进的潜在的人类性格。有些人可能会问,塑造我们的认知能力以达到卓越,获得竞争优势,或者随心所欲,有什么错吗?在所有这些情况下,使用聪明的药物是为了达到一个特定的目的,一个目的。总的来说,目标是:在争夺有限资源的军备竞赛中智胜对手,从而获得竞争优势。简而言之:竞争比合作或团结更受重视。为这个目标奋斗有什么错呢?作者提出,人们是否真的想生活在一个提倡“个人竞争而不是社会合作”的社会中,这个问题值得认真考虑。在给出答案的过程中,作者借鉴了“约束伦理”框架,认为智能药物的广泛使用会给个人带来负面神经/行为后果的风险,从长远来看,这种风险可能伴随着社会价值取向的恶化。
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