Title: What Is Enhancement and When Should We Enhance
1What Is Enhancement and When Should We Enhance? A
Welfarist Account Professor Julian
Savulescu Uehiro Chair in Practical Ethics Funded
by ENHANCE, European Union
2The Welfarist Account and Its Implications
- Stephen Hawking how can the human race survive
the next 100 years? - Asteroids
- Nuclear war
- Climate change
- Accidental or intentional release of genetically
engineered viruses - Theres a sick joke that the reason we havent
been visited by aliens is that when a
civilisation reaches our stage of development, it
becomes unstable and destroys itselfThe
long-term survival of the human race will be safe
only if we spread out into space, and then to
other stars.This wont happen for at least 100
years so we have to be very careful. Perhaps, we
must hoper that genetic engineering will make us
wise and less aggressive. (The Guardian, Thurs
Aug 3, 2006, News 3) - That is, the future of humanity may lie in
enhancing our genome
31. The Sociologically Pragmatic Approach
- Paul Root Wolpe
- a slippery socially constructed concept
- Yet, ultimately, any exclusive enhancement
definition must fail, in part because concepts
such as disease, normalcy, and health are
significantly culturally and historically bound,
and thus the result of negotiated values. - James Canton
- The future may hold different definitions of
human enhancement that affect culture,
intelligence, memory, physical performance, even
longevity. Different cultures will define human
performance based on their social and political
values. It is for our nation to define these
values and chart the future of human performance - enhancement captures a certain a value-laded
domain of discourse related to human performance
rather than having a substantive transcultural
meaning itself.
42. The Ideological Approach
- Presidents Council on Bioethics defines
enhancement in relation to - human desires and goals.
- The human meaning and moral assessment must be
tackled directly they are unlikely to be settled
by the term enhancement, any more than they are
by the nature of the technological intervention
itself. Leon Kass - Aims directly at deep values, invoking concepts
of metaphysics or spirituality. - ideological approach enhancement is the
practical means to achieve ideological ends.
53. The Not-Medicine Approach Treatment vs
Enhancement
- Another influential approach has been to define
enhancement in terms of going beyond
health-restoring treatment or health. - The term enhancement is usually used in
bioethics to characterize interventions designed
to improve human form or functioning beyond what
is necessary to sustain or restore good health.
Eric T. Juengst - Definition of disease
- Normative
- Non-normative naturalistic
- Boorse and BST
- Species-typical normal functioning
64. The Functional Approach
- defined in terms of enhanced systems functions
- E.g. cognitive enhancement is defined in terms of
improved general information processing
abilities.
7Enhancement of What?
- Enhancement is a wide concept
- increase or improvement.
- doctor may enhance his patients chance of
survival by giving the patient a drug. - enhance the functioning of a persons immune
system or memory (the functionalist account). - Distinguish functional enhancement from human
enhancement - enhancing a permanently unconscious persons
chance of surviving might not be good for the
person. It might not constitute human
enhancement. It might not enhance intrinsic good
or good in a predicative sense.
8Example of Genetic Memory Enhancement
- Genetic memory enhancement has been demonstrated
in rats and mice. - In normal animals during maturation expression of
the NR2B subunit of the NMDA receptor is
gradually replaced with expression of the NR2A
subunit, something that may be linked to less
brain plasticity in adult animals. - Tsien et al. modified mice to overexpress the
NR2B. - The NR2B Doogie mice demonstrated improved
memory performance, both in terms of acquisition
and retention. - This included unlearning of fear conditioning,
which is believed to be due to learning a
secondary memory. - The modification also made them more sensitive to
certain forms of pain, showing a potentially
non-trivial trade-off. - It is possible that even though memory is
improved, their lives go worse.
9What Is Human Enhancement?
- when we are considering human enhancement, we are
considering improvement of the persons life. - not mere functioning as a member of species homo
sapiens - The improvement is some change in state of the
person biological or psychological- which is
good. - the value in question is the goodness of a
persons life, that is, her well-being.
105. A Welfarist Definition of Human Enhancement
- Welfarist Definition of Human Enhancement
- Any change in the biology or psychology of a
person which increases the chances of leading a
good life in circumstances C. - On the Welfarist Definition of Enhancement, we
can define an enhanced state as a capability. - Capability
- Any state of a persons biology or psychology
which increases the chance of leading a good life
in circumstances C. - Disability
- Any state of a persons biology or psychology
which decreases the chance of leading a good life
in circumstances C.
11Treatment vs Enhancement
- Disease vs disability
- Much debate about enhancement draws a mutually
exclusive distinction between medical treatment
and enhancement. - Naturalistic Conception of Disease
- Any state of a persons biology or psychology
which reduces species typical normal functioning
below some statistically defined level. - Narrow Definition of Enhancement
- Any change in the biology or psychology of a
person which increases species typical normal
functioning above some statistically defined
level. - For example, low intelligence is defined as
intellectual disability and treated as a disease
when IQ falls below 70. - On the naturalistic conception of disease and the
narrow definition of enhancement, raising
someones IQ from 60 to 70 is treating a disease
and raising someones IQ from 70 to 80 is
enhancement.
12Folk Definitions
- Folk usage of the term enhancement supports this
account. - Enhancement
- The action or process of enhancement the fact of
being enhanced - Enhance
- to raise in degree, heighten, intensify
(qualities, states, powers, etc) - to raise (prices, value)
- to raise or increase in price, value,
importance, attractiveness, etc - (Formerly used simply, to increase in price
or value esp. to raise the intrinsic value of
(coin). Also (rarely) to increase in
attractiveness, to beautify, improve.) - The spirit of all these definitions is
- Enhance to increase value
- In the context of human enhancement, to enhance
is to increase the value of a persons life.
13Subclasses of Enhancements
- Enhancements include a family of different kinds
of improvements. - Medical Treatment of Disease
- Increasing Natural Human Potential increasing a
persons own natural endowments of capabilities
within the range typical of the species homo
sapiens, e.g raising a persons IQ from 100 to
140. - Superhuman Enhancements (sometimes called
posthuman or transhuman) increasing a persons
capabilities beyond the range typical for the
species homo sapiens, e.g. giving humans bat
sonar or the capacity fully read minds. - By accepting the Welfarist Definition of
Enhancement, the question of when should we
enhance becomes when should we increase human
well-being?
14Advantages of a Welfarist Conception of
Enhancement
- Sociologically Pragmatic
- Captures intercultural variability in concept of
good life - Ideological
- Can incorporate wide conceptions of human
well-being - Disagreements are about concept of well-being,
not its maximisation (enhancement) - Functional
- Facilitates normative evaluation of functional
enhancements
15Advantages
- Treatment/Enhancement
- Disease is disability
- Gives an account of badness of disease -Colour
blindness - Gives more appropriate and justifiable value to
treatment in terms of well-being - Allows comparisons between treatments and other
enhancements - generally, disease has significant impact on our
well-being gt medical treatment greater priority - But it leaves open whether there might be
non-medical enhancements that have a much greater
influence on well-being than medical treatment
and so have greater priority. - Imagine we could raise the IQ of everyone who had
an IQ of between 70-80 by 10points. This would be
enhancement not medical treatment. However, this
might (depending on which theory of justice you
accepted) have greater priority than raising the
IQ of a few people with an an IQ of 60 by 10
points, even though the latter is medical
treatment - Removing a wart vs radically increasing memory
16The Nature of Enhancement
- Enhancement
- Capability
- Disability
17Expected to have a good life
- Expected does not mean will
- Those with the greatest gifts may squander them
- Those with significant disabilities may have very
good lives
18Decision-theoretic Consequentialism
- One standard way of making decisions under
uncertainty is to choose that option which
maximizes expected value. - the expected value of adopting any course of
action can be given by - Pr(good outcome given that course taken) X V(good
outcome) Pr(other outcomes given that course
taken) X V(other outcomes).
19Consequentialism
- Consequentialism instructs the agent to
- 1. List all the relevant possible courses of
action. - 2. List the possible outcomes of each action. 3.
Estimate the probability that each outcome of
each action will occur, given that the action in
question is taken. - 4. Assign values to each possible outcome.
- 5. Calculate the expected value of each possible
outcome. This is the product of the value of
that outcome and the probability of it
eventuating, given that a particular action is
taken. - 6. Calculate the expected value of each action.
This is the sum of expected values of each the
possible outcomes (or consequences) of that
action. - 7. Choose the action with the greatest expected
value.
20Example knee replacement
- Consider a person trying to decide whether to
have a knee replacement for arthritis - weigh the pros and cons
- how good/bad these are
- how likely they are
- how bad the pain and disability currently are
- how much they will be alleviated by the operation
- how likely the operation is to be successful
- what the risks of the operation are
- how bad the complications might be, how much the
operation costs, in money and time, and the
consequences of this - what the costs or benefits of waiting are.
- Applies to hearing aid, laser surgery to achieve
greater than 20/20 vision (hawk like vision),
sonar
21What is the best life?
- Life with the most well-being
- Philosophers have exercised themselves for
several thousand years on what constitutes
well-being - There are various theories of well-being
hedonistic, desire-fulfilment, objective list - Not just absence of disease.
- People trade length of life for non-health
related well-being- smoking, alcohol, risk
22What is the best life?
- We do have some idea of the good life
- Social institutions and scientific research aimed
at addressing this - Services to enable people lead good lives
- Ask advice
- Self help
- Education of children
23Disability, Capability and Well-Being
- Well-being
- how well a life goes (goodness)
- cannot distribute well-being
- Capability
- a state of the person which increases the
probability of achieving a good life - Disability
- a state of the person which decreases the
probability of achieving a good life - disease is disability
- Moral obligation to promote well-being through
increasing capabilities and reducing disabilities
24What is a disability?
- In 2001, Sharon Duchesneau and Candy McCullough,
a deaf lesbian couple had their second child
Gauvin - The women, who wanted to have a deaf child,
conceived Gauvin through Artificial Insemination
by Donor (AID), using sperm from a friend they
knew to have five generations of inherited
deafness in his family - They argued that
- Deafness is an identity, not a medical affliction
that needs to be fixed - The desire to have a deaf child is a natural
outcome of the pride and self-acceptance many
people have of being deaf - A hearing child would be a blessing, a deaf child
would be a special blessing - They would be able to be better parents to a deaf
child than to one who was hearing - The child would grow up to be a valued member of
a real and supportive deaf community - Deafness is not a disability
25Is Deafness a Disability?
- Yes
- A deaf person cannot hear music, the sound of
wind, the crack of thunder or the seductive
whisper of a lover. - The human voice is a fundamental part of the
human condition and verbal communication a
characteristic part of human culture. - Deafness also reduces the chances of realising a
good life because it makes it harder to live, to
achieve ones goals, to engage with others in a
world which is based on the spoken word. It is
harder to get a job, harder to move in the world,
harder to respond to emergencies - Signing may be a unique mode of communication but
it is better to speak two languages than one
26An example
- On the night of 10th of April, 2003, a school for
deaf and mute children in Makhachkala in Russia
caught fire. - Twenty-eight children aged 7 to 14 died and more
than 100 were injured. - Several children, some naked, jumped through
windows to escape the inferno. Rescuing the
children was hampered because each child had to
be awakened individually and told in sign
language what to do.
27Capability/Disability Is Context Dependent
- Deafness is not a disability in a very noisy
world but it is in our world - Atopic tendency
- Asthma in developed world
- Protection against worm infestation in developing
world - X is a disability in circumstances C if
- X reduces the chances of a person realising a
possible good life in circumstances C. - In order to decide whether a state is a
disability or a capability we need to fix or
predict the social and natural environment
28Biology/Psychology as Capability/Disability
- Biological or psychological states can be
predicted to be capabilities or disabilities in
likely future environments - Our biology contributes not only to our health
but to how well our life is likely to go
29Example Self Control
- In the 1960s Walter Mischel conducted impulse
control experiments where 4-year-old children
were left in a room with one marshmallow, after
being told that if they did not eat the
marshmallow, they could later have two. - Some children would eat it as soon as the
researcher left. - Others would use a variety of strategies to help
control their behaviour and ignore the temptation
of the single marshmallow.
30Self Control
- A decade later, they found that those who were
better at delaying gratification had - more friends
- better academic performance
- more motivation to succeed.
- Whether the child had grabbed for the marshmallow
had a much stronger bearing on their SAT scores
than did their IQ. - Impulse control has also been linked to
socioeconomic control and avoiding conflict with
the law. - Poor impulse control is a disability
31Other Categories
- Buchanan, Brock, Daniels and Wikler All Purpose
Goods - Intelligence
- Memory
- Self- discipline
- Foresight
- Patience
- Sense of humour
- Optimism
32Other Categories
- Hearing can become deaf but the deaf cannot
become hearing. - Future opportunity-enhancing
- Hearing
- 4 limbs
- Open future
- Future opportunity-restricting
- Deafness
- Limb amputation (for apotemnophilia)
33Other Categories
- Autonomy enhancing
- Improving the psychological capacities necessary
for autonomy - concept of self
- ability to remember, understand and deliberate on
relevant information - strength of will
- foresight
- empathy, etc
- Our moral character
- empathy, imagination, sympathy, fairness,
honesty, etc - Monkeys and grape experiment
34Other Specific Examples
- Religiosity capability or disability?
- Criminality
- Dutch family criminality mutation in the MAO
region of X chromosome - Aggression
- Hawking claims genetic modification to reduce
aggression is an important strategy in preserving
humanity over next 100 years (Guardian 3/8/06)
35Genes, not men, may hold the key to female
pleasure
- genes accounted for 31 per cent of the chance of
having an orgasm during intercourse and 51 per
cent during masturbation - ability to gain sexual satisfaction is largely
inherited - The genes involved could be linked to physical
differences is sex organs and hormone levels or
factors such as mood and anxiety. - The Age, June 8, 2005
36Significance of a Welfarist Account of Enhancement
- 1 There is a reason to enhance
- 2. These reasons must be balanced against others
- 3. Medical treatment has the same normative basis
as other enhancements - 4. Disability is Ubiquitous All of Us Are
Disabled and Fail to Lead the Best Life - all of us are disabled in some ways which make it
more difficult to lead a very good life. - enhancement is an issue of vital concern to all
of us. - 5. There are strong moral reasons to enhance
37Choosing not to enhance is wrong
- Dietary neglect results in a child with a
stunning intellect becoming normal - Wrong
- Failure to institute some diet means a normal
child fails to achieve a stunning intellect - Equally wrong
- Substitute biological intervention for diet
38Change Society, Not People
- We should alter social arrangements to promote
well-being, not biologically alter people - Improve society not enhance people to increase
well-being - Related disability is socially constructed
- Response
- Biopsychosocial fit
- We should consider all modifications, and choose
the modification, or combination, which is best - Skin colour
- Social modification and discrimination
- Biological modification and environmental risk
39Social Not Biological Enhancement
- Good Reasons to Prefer Social Rather Than
Biological Intervention - If it is safer
- If it is more likely to be successful
- If justice requires it (based on the limitations
of resources) - If there are benefits to others or less harm
- If it is identity preserving
- BUT VICE VERSA
40Social Construction of Disability
- Disability is socially constructed when there are
good reasons to prefer social intervention than
direct biological or psychological intervention. - Biopsychosocial construction of disability
- Must consider reasons for and against
intervention at all levels - Social
- Psychological
- Biological
41How do we decide?
- There are four possible ways in which our
psychology and biology will be decided. - Nature or God
- Experts philosophers, bioethicists,
psychologists, scientists - Authorities government, doctors
- By people themselves- liberty and autonomy
- It is a basic principle of liberal states
- State be neutral to different conceptions of
the good life. - This means that we allow individuals to lead the
life that they believe is best for themselves
respect for their personal autonomy or capacity
for self-rule. - The sole ground for interference is when that
individual choice may harm others.
42Limits
- There are limits to what a liberal state should
provide - Harm to others
- the intervention (like some manipulation that
increases uncontrollable aggressiveness) should
not result in harm. Such harm should not be
direct or indirect, for example, by causing some
unfair competitive advantage - Distributive justice
- interventions should be distributed according to
principles of justice
43Mill and Well-Being
- Questions of enhancement are questions of
well-being - Forming and acting on our own conception of the
good life - John Stuart Mill argued that when our actions
only affect ourselves, we should be free to
construct and act on our own conception of what
is the best life for us. - experiments in living that people discover what
works for them. - Mill strongly praised originality and variety
in choice as being essential to discovering which
lives are best for human beings. - distinguished between higher pleasures of
feelings and imagination and lower pleasures
of mere sensation. Mill criticized "ape-like
imitation", subjugation of oneself to custom and
fashion, indifference to individuality and lack
of originality.
44Mill
- "I have said that it is important to give the
freest scope possible to uncustomary things, in
order that it may appear in time which of these
are fit to be converted into customs. But
independence of action, and disregard of custom,
are not solely deserving of encouragement for the
chance they afford that better modes of action,
and customs more worthy of general adoption, may
be struck out nor is it only persons of decided
mental superiority who have a just claim to carry
on their lives in their own way. There is no
reason that all human existence should be
constructed on some one or small number of
patterns. If a person possesses any tolerable
amount of common sense and experience, his own
mode of laying out his existence is the best, not
because it is the best in itself, but because it
is his own mode."
45Conclusion
- Welfarist Definition of Human Enhancement
- Any change in the biology or psychology of a
person which increases the chances of leading a
good life in circumstances C. - When should we bring about some modification of
biological or psychological alteration of a
person which is a putative enhancement? - On a Welfarist Account, whether we should
intervene depends on - account of well-being we employ
- whether the modification is expected to increase
the chances of the person in question leading a
good life in the likely - whether there are reasons to prefer modifications
of the natural or social environment. - whether the modification will harm others or
create or exacerbate injustice.
46Comclusion
- Questions of enhancement are questions of value
theory and the account of well-being we should
employ. - They are questions of science and what brings
about well-being. And they are questions of the
limits of the pursuit of self-interest or
beneficence. - When should we enhance biology or psychology?
- When there is most reason
- When this is the best way to improve a persons
well-being, esp with respect to social or natural
intervention - When this does not result harm to others
- When there are no countervailing reasons of
justice
47Procreative Beneficence
- Obligation to have children with the most
capabilities and least disabilities
48Significance Scope for Enhancement
- Evidence that basic character traits, moral
dispositions, and subjective well-being have a
surprisingly high genetic basis - We claim that we should change both
genes/psychology and environment to promote
peoples well-being. - The basic (though not only) criteria for choosing
between the two are factors such as efficiency,
cost, etc. - Other people think that there are moral reasons
not to tamper with genes (or even psychology) and
therefore promotion of well-being can be achieved
only by changing the environment. - If environment counts for little, and a person
with an innate disposition for low subjective
well-being couldnt be made very happy roughly in
the same way that a mouse embryo couldnt develop
to become an elephant, whatever the environment.
This provides a strong empirical reason in favour
of enhancement. - Those who oppose it on various moral grounds must
concede that the price is that many people will
have less or even little well-being than is
possible. This seems an unattractive view.
49Significance
- People complain that its hard to know what it
the best life, or what traits could be expected
to promote well-being. - But if subjective well-being is mostly
genetically based, then it may be a variable we
can manipulate directly, through genetic
manipulation. (Or, as people do at the moment, by
altering psychology using psychoactive
substances.) This largely answers these
worries/objections. - Not everyone would agree that what psychologists
call subjective well-being is all of well-being,
but few would deny it is an important part of it.