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with reasons and freedom of thought, rather than the fact that it has an impact on
freedom of action or on freedom from political domination.
The analysis presented in this chapter is aimed at a) addressing the issues raised by
God
Machine thought experiment, the interpretation of which has been used as a
basis for arguing both for and against the desirability of MB and, b) using the
analysis to tease out the important factors influencing moral agency and freedom in
cases of overdetermination. However, as I argue in the last section of this chapter,
the utility of those arguments in discussing the real-world MB is limited. Similarly
to other instances of using this philosophical method in discussions regarding real-
world applications of technology, thought experiments of
this level of abstraction
are useful tools in teasing out the aspects that are relevant, drawing attention to
some aspects of reality and helping us in building conceptualizations that then can
be of help when applied to real-world cases. However, those gains do not translate
straightforwardly into moral assessment of real-world interventions. Thus, the
analysis in this chapter aims at providing additional conceptual clarity and
providing further support for the importance of engagement with reasons for moral
agency but not as an argument about real world moral enhancement. Chapter 8 will
address this limitation and build on the analysis presented in this chapter.
After introducing Savulescu and Persson’s (2012a) thought experiment in section
7.2, section 7.3 examines the God Machine’s impact
on ascription of praise and
blame. I conclude that the problems the God Machine brings to the ascription of
moral praise and blame do not amount to a serious argument against its desirability.
In section 7.4, I analyse the God Machine’s impact in light of the distinctions
proposed by Frankfurt and argue that the God Machine preserves freedom of action
and even free will, but affects the ability to form ‘a will of one’s own’ and impacts
freedom of thought. Section 7.5 responds to Harris’ argument in which he sees the
problematic impact of the God Machine as relating to the divorcing of thought and
action: ‘Decisions to no effect are pointless from the moral perspective; for what is
a good state of mind worth, if it makes no difference to the world?’ (2014a, p. 249)
In response, I argue that the agent’s lack of appropriate engagement with reasons is
the crucial factor, rather than the fact of changing the behaviour – that the impact
for freedom of action related to overdetermination and the ‘direct’ mode of
changing behaviour is less important than the lack of awareness and control of the
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agent over those changes and that a good state of mind is worth quite a lot. It may
even ground meaningful ‘alternative possibilities’.
Section 7.6 examines Sparrow’s (2014) argument according to which the God
Machine scenario is undesirable because the God Machine dominates its subjects. I
argue that Sparrow’s argument depends on an inappropriate personification of the
God Machine and that the God Machine is better understood as an analogy for the
law. Pettit’s (1997) theory of freedom as non-domination is an unfortunate choice
as the basis of Sparrow’s (2014) critique because it
focuses on the relation of
persons
and is limited in the analysis of the freedom-impairing impacts of
structures. Insofar as we treat the God Machine as a structure similar to law, there is
no strong reason to suppose that it would enable the exercise of others' arbitrary and
unchecked power in
the idealized conditions
of the thought experiment.
However, as I argue in section 7.8, worries about the arbitrary and
unchecked use of
power become warranted if we consider the application of the God Machine in a
possible world more like ours. Moreover, Savulescu and Persson’s (2012a) appeal
to Mill’s harm principle is weak because it relies on a misinterpretation of the
application of the harm principle. In fact, the harm principle would provide a
stronger argument
against
the God Machine’s changing people’s intentions.
Moreover, the spirit of Mill’s use of the harm principle is to protect the individual’s
private sphere from state
and societal encroachment, and there is nothing more
central and private than the ‘inner citadel’ of our thoughts.
In the final section of this chapter I outline the limitations of the application of the
God Machine to the analysis of the impact of MB on moral agency.
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