What (if anything) morally separates environmental from neurochemical behavioral interventions?

IF 2.6 4区 哲学 Q1 ETHICS
Viktor Ivanković
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Abstract

Drawing from the literatures on the ethics of nudging and moral bioenhancement, I elaborate several pairs of cases in which one intervention is classified as an environmental behavioral intervention (EBI) and the other as a neurochemical behavioral intervention (NBI) in order to morally compare them. The intuition held by most is that NBIs are by far the more morally troubling kind of influence. However, if this intuition cannot be vindicated, we should at least entertain the Similarity Thesis, according to which EBIs and NBIs share relevant moral features to the extent that moral conclusions about one are implied about the other in the described pairs of cases. I test this thesis by putting forward a number of possible moral grounds for setting EBIs and NBIs apart, including three of the most promising ones – physical invasiveness, disclosure and avoidance, and inevitability. I conclude that although these promising grounds might not bear the full burden of vindicating the intuition against Similarity by themselves, clustering them together can establish discernible moral separation.

从道义上讲,环境干预与神经化学行为干预之间有什么区别(如果有的话)?
借鉴 "点拨"(nudging)和 "道德生物强化"(moral bioenhancement)的相关文献,我阐述了几对案例,其中一个案例被归类为环境行为干预(EBI),另一个案例被归类为神经化学行为干预(NBI),以便从道德角度对它们进行比较。大多数人的直觉是,到目前为止,NBI 是道德上更令人担忧的一种影响。然而,如果这种直觉无法得到证实,我们至少应该接受 "相似论"(Similarity Thesis),根据该论,EBIs 和 NBIs 都具有相关的道德特征,以至于在所描述的成对案例中,关于其中一种的道德结论隐含着关于另一种的道德结论。我通过提出一系列可能的道德理由来检验这一论点,这些理由包括三个最有希望的理由--物理侵袭性、披露和回避以及不可避免性--来区分环境生物多样性和非环境生物多样性。我的结论是,尽管这些有希望的理由本身可能无法承担证明反相似性直觉的全部责任,但将它们集中在一起可以建立可辨别的道德区分。
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来源期刊
Neuroethics
Neuroethics MEDICAL ETHICS-
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
7.10%
发文量
31
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Neuroethics is an international, peer-reviewed journal dedicated to academic articles on the ethical, legal, political, social and philosophical questions provoked by research in the contemporary sciences of the mind and brain; especially, but not only, neuroscience, psychiatry and psychology. The journal publishes articles on questions raised by the sciences of the brain and mind, and on the ways in which the sciences of the brain and mind illuminate longstanding debates in ethics and philosophy.
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