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consider
all
his relevant beliefs. Rather, he considered only his
beliefs about slavery
and property.
What should we make of this interpretation of inverse-akrasia when considering
MB? The first relatively uncontroversial points are that a) we are not perfect
deliberators, sometimes failing to consider all the moral reasons we have for action,
b) that sometimes we act against our better judgement and c) that sometimes acting
against our better judgement is conducive to the good. That is not much of a
surprise. The more important point here is that although
akratic action may be
irrational in the sense of acting against one’s best judgement, it does not mean that
it is ‘bizarre’ in the sense of lack of responsiveness to any reasons. Akratic action,
even though irrational overall, may be
more or less
irrational depending on what set
of reasons it is based on. We could simply wave away the issue since the action is
involuntary, but I think that this would be missing something important. Even when
we act akratically and fail to consider all the relevant reasons, it
does
make a
difference whether or not we act on the basis of attitudes, emotions and beliefs that
are part of and consistent with our world view.
The difference in ethical significance is twofold. Firstly, given that we regularly act
akratically (for support of this claim see 8.3.6.), it is better from the point of view of
moral agency that those akratic actions are at least partially justified within what the
agent finds important and valuable and has some actual
connection to the moral
reasons that the agent would endorse. This is why it makes a difference whether
Huck’s akratic actions stem from reasons related to the value of friendship, keeping
promises and loyalty (a moral stance) or Huck’s good act is motivated by reasons
altogether non-moral (e.g., Jim is a good fisherman and Huck is hungry) or
unendorsed considerations (e.g., Huck thinks friendship,
loyalty and keeping
promises is for moral weaklings and true morality consists of moral egoism
unpolluted by attachment to any particular individuals). Secondly, although whether
or not akratic acts are connected to moral reasons the agent has might not make a
moral difference in that particular instance – insofar
as the agent is acting
akratically anyway – it
is
important for the development of moral agency that the
akratic actions are more, rather than less integrated with our world view. We remain
imperfect
moral agents, and the process of developing appropriate and endorsed
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emotional responses, flexible control of those
responses and doing so with
reference to moral reasons is, well, a process. However, we know we are further
from the goal when our acts are based on desires and inclinations that we in no way
endorse from the moral perspective and which go against the moral reasons we find
compelling.
I do not intend to suggest that akratic action constitutes the ideal moral agency we
want to seek or promote. It further diminishes moral agency, and especially moral
development, however, to more often act akratically
on desires which we do not
endorse and which give very little compelling (to us) reasons for action.
Compulsory moral MB as proposed by Persson and Savulescu (2008), in contrast to
voluntary agent-led MB, widens the gap between the ‘motivational pulls’ and the
reasons we have
even in the
akratic
. In doing so, it puts the agent further away not
only from continent action, but also from virtue. By contrast, there is lesser
prima
facie
danger of this kind from voluntary and agent-led biomedical modifications.
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