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compulsions are irresistible – an agent has to act on them – they cannot be said to
impair moral review. They are better conceptualised
as impairing freedom by
decreasing the amount of effective moral
control
. Thus, the argument against
Persson and Savulescu (2008)-style MB needs to be qualified and sharpened to
refer primarily to moral control.
Moreover, the distinction between moral review
and moral control makes a
difference for the ethical assessment of MB. MB needs not preclude taking a moral
stance, i.e. considering actions from a moral perspective, nor the ability to assess
one’s actions from a moral perspective. Moreover, if MB’s influence is known to
the agent, this can be accounted for in the process of review, just as the impact of
SSRIs on person’s mood is accounted for when people reason about the influence
of SSRIs on their lives and decide whether or not to continue the medication. The
influence on the control of one’s actions, and its moral importance,
is a separate
issue.
The fact that moral review does not appear to be significantly impaired constitutes a
big difference between the likely real-world pharmacological or brain-stimulation
enhancements and the God Machine scenario – the God Machine impairs the ability
for moral review significantly more as it precludes any resistance or meaningful
reasoning about the sources of one’s actions. I have argued that the God Machine
does not simply introduce the irresistible compulsion that one may view as such
and take a stance towards. The loss of the ability to govern one’s
actions
independently and rationally is covert, unknown to agent and achieved exactly by
affecting the beliefs and structures that makes the moral review the
agent’s own
moral review. Contrary to the Rational Persuader Machine,
in the God Machine
scenario the changes in the agent’s beliefs do not come in a way that the agent can
appropriately engage with, in a way that would constitute a process of learning and
revising one’s view on the basis of reasons. Voluntary MB does not suffer from
similar pitfalls and, as a result, MB does not diminish
moral review to the extent
that the God Machine does. In other words, the real-world MB does not necessarily
undermine the crucial precondition for freedom and the meaningful talk about
freedom as the God Machine does.
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This conclusion has to be qualified to account for cases where the MB-induced
emotions overwhelm the agent to the point of precluding moral review and
seriously and negatively affect judgement. We have strong
reasons to avoid such
outcomes. At times, however, we experience strong emotions, but they need not
render us incapacitated with regard to
the ability for moral review, especially
insofar as we are talking about moral agency that involves offline moral
deliberation such as talking about collective, state and supra-state
solutions to the
world's problems. As a result, we have a strong reason to use biomedical ME with
continued evaluation of their effects and reflective guidance. This justified caution,
however, does not mean that there is a strong reason to abandon the pursuit of MB.
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