201
But beyond the first appeal this is puzzling – what has empathy to do with it? We
could empathise with a vaccinated child or imagine the ones who would die if not
for the vaccination. If we are to support a military intervention by our own country
in a faraway but oil-rich land, it does not appear to me that we do it because we
personally know the soldiers, or
empathise
with our neighbours’ benefits more than
the other people’s sorrow. There might be a bias in terms of being more easily able
to empathise
with people more like us, but most of us do not find it hard to
empathise with those who had their loved ones killed or are starving – those arouse
rather vivid pictures and it does not take a lot of cultural sensitivity to be able to
react to them with empathy. We may suffer from a problem of imagination, care
about our own interests more than citizens of other nations, be more often exposed
to the images in the media that enhance our ability to empathise with ‘our side’
(considering that there is an ‘our side’ is probably an indication of a certain way of
perceiving and understanding the events), and care more about the interests of our
family than others or simply be too busy with our own lives to care.
Those plausible
explanations have little to do with
empathy
as an affective or cognitive ability. Just
as anger is not
the problem
to be eliminated (contra Seneca), as it can equally serve
to fuel the fight against injustice and unfairness or lead to unjust violence; similarly
empathy can be conducive or not to moral outcomes. Especially when we are
talking about offline moral review, such as in deliberation about a moral course of
action and thinking about political solutions to matters requiring collective action,
the quality and process of our reasoning about policy measures seems to hardly be
rooted in ‘more or less empathy.’
54
Thus, ‘more empathy’ is not a solution to
world’s ills, but neither is ‘more empathy’ perilous to the moral discourse. The
ability for offline moral review, by and large, is preserved regardless of the strength
of emotions and is thus accessible to people with a range of emotions and degrees
of empathy – bioenhanced or not bioenhanced.
I do not see a clear indication that serotonin or oxytocin-induced changes would
necessarily have such an perilous effect and thus
should not gravely worry us,
54
Within certain parameters – some empathetic ability may be necessary for understanding
what others’ interests are, for example. But I assume that we are talking about enhancement
in the population that does not, for the most part, suffer from Autistic Spectrum Disorder.
The ability to
understand
that to starve or to be poor is not good for others does not require
a whole lot of empathy.
202
although given the side effects of most drugs and their typical impacts on the
outcomes of reasoning, the matter is up for debate. This, however, leaves us with a
difficult question – since there exists a degree of variability in the presence of those
neurotransmitters in drug-free populations anyway, the drug-induced changes might
be seen as not more biasing that our non-modified condition. A successful critique
would have to make sense of and account for that.
Notice that I have argued that the ability for moral review would be likely to be
present ‘by and large.’ This is because the question about
more subtle effects on
reasoning (as well as motivation and action) remains open. If we were convinced
that any kind of biomedical emotion modulation would have a detrimental effect on
moral agency, we would have to accept that people who take SSRIs are somehow
made worse moral agents for that. For Harris’ and Blooms’ argument to be strong,
such impairment needs to happen in a specific way – by impairing the ability for
appropriate moral review and seriously impairing their ability for political
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