
doi: 10.1111/bioe.12284
pmid: 27687875
AbstractRecently philosophers have proposed a wide variety of interventions referred to as ‘moral enhancements’. Some of these interventions are concerned with helping individuals make more informed decisions; others, however, are designed to compel people to act as the intervener sees fit. Somewhere between these two extremes lie interventions designed to direct an agent's attention either towards morally relevant issues – hat‐hanging – or away from temptations to do wrong – hat‐hiding. I argue that these interventions fail to constitute genuine moral enhancement because, although they may result in more desirable outcomes – more altruism, more law‐following, and/or less self‐destructive behavior, they ignore a person's intentions, and often what makes an action right or wrong is the intent behind it.
Motivation, Informed Consent, Humans, Intention, Morals, Altruism, Biomedical Enhancement
Motivation, Informed Consent, Humans, Intention, Morals, Altruism, Biomedical Enhancement
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