pharmacopeia
toolkit
widens.
Brain stimulation is a more speculative mode of MB. In this work I will focus on
deep brain stimulation (DBS) and not on non-invasive brain stimulation methods,
because emotion modulation is more likely to involve stimulation of structures deep
in the brain. If developments in technology allow non-invasive stimulation of those
brain structures and circuits, this may change the balance of costs and benefits, yet
the more general arguments presented in this thesis will also apply to those
methods. The current deep brain stimulation technology is mostly used for
movement disorders and Parkinson’s and the move towards application in
neuropsychiatric disorders has met with considerable controversy (see: Pacholczyk,
2015). However, the behavioural changes observed in treatment of other disorders
as well as the research on stimulation-induced behaviour and mood change, indicate
that attempts at MB are within reasonable reach. The application of brain
stimulation for such purpose in the near future is likely to be slow, if any. This is
partially due to high surgical and post-surgical risks related to the necessity for
surgically implanting electrodes, partially due to the history of brain surgery and
related professional and social resistance and partially due to high cost of the
procedure and subsequent check-ups and maintenance of the stimulation device.
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Ablative procedures to decrease aggressive behaviour (procedures in which a part
of the brain is destroyed) has been largely stopped by the 1980s due to social
pressure and ethical concerns. However, rarely appearing single cases and small
follow-up studies indicate that a small number of patients, predominantly those
with mental retardation and for whom no pharmacological treatment was effective,
receive such treatment in a mental health setting (See Jiminez-Ponce et al. 2011).
This opens the door for using brain stimulation in similar cases – a technique more
expensive and inconvenient but also more flexible in its effects. Moreover, brain
stimulation offers to be more specific and flexible in the future than generally
acting pharmacological neuromodulators. Adjustable and changeable settings and
the ability target a specific brain region/circuit make this technique potentially
promising biomedical method.
Although the use of pharmacology and brain stimulation for moral modification and
modulating pro-sociality is to some extent speculative, biomedicine’s potential for
emotion modulation has been shown in the treatments of mood disorders. However,
using biomedical tools to change our moral and social functioning raises ethical
questions and it is the aim of this thesis to examine some of them and to contribute
to the current debate on this topic.
The leading question of this thesis is ‘What ethical issues should I consider when
deciding whether and how to use biomedical means of moral modification?’ The
common tread throughout this work is the importance of engaging with moral
reasons in choosing, guiding the application and assessing the effects of MB.
Chapters 1-4 focus on the conceptual issues and the plausibility of MB. Chapters 5-
7 address objections and doubts about the ethical desirability of MB. Chapters 7
and 8 focus on the arguments related to the potential impact of MB on freedom and
moral agency.
In Chapter 1 I raise the question of possible meanings of the phrase ‘moral
enhancement’ in order to outline the possible applications of moral modification.
This discussion also allows distinguishing different levels and aspects of ethical
assessment that a MB can be subject to. Moral enhancement’ is a potentially
ambiguous term. Section 1.2 examines what ‘moral’ in the phrase ‘moral
enhancement’ means and section 1.3 (especially section 1.3.3.) focuses on drawing
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an interpretation what ‘enhancement’ amounts in order to show the range of
potential uses MB can be put to and discuss what matters ethically with those
different uses in mind. Further, section 1.3 briefly discusses the meaning of the
term ‘enhancement’ in the context of the treatment and enhancement distinction
(1.3.2) and propose the understanding of enhancement as improvement (s. 1.3.3)
with an aim of drawing the scope of the current discussion. Understanding
enhancement as improvement provides a frame for the scope of the discussion in
the current work, and underlies the consideration of both therapeutic and non-
therapeutic uses of MB and emotion modulation in this work (see also Chapter 5).
Chapter 2 addresses doubts about the plausibility of MB. It considers whether
specifically biomedical means of modifying the moral sphere are likely to be
effective, asks what kinds of effects can be expected after MB and thus what goals
are in this context reasonable. It also considers what should be taken into
consideration when making ethical assessment of costs and benefits (see also
Chapter 7). I argue that the goals for MB set out by some of the proponents are too
ambitious and should be revisited. However, if we set similar expectations to the
expectations we have of cognitive enhancement, meaningful moral or social
enhancement is plausible.
Chapter 3 focuses on the discussion of modification of pro-social emotions and
attitudes proposed by some to be a target for MB focused on enhancing moral
agency. It explores the conflation between the moral and the pro-social present in
the literature as well as the discourse in which some, but not all, emotions as
constructed as being themselves ‘moral’. The aim of the Chapter is to ask whether
or not biomedically modulating pro-social emotions and attitudes such as empathy
would likely better moral agency. I argue that empathy and anger might have both
pro-social and anti-social consequences, and that even pro-social sentiments are not
sufficient for morality. Instead I propose that engagement with moral reasons is
necessary for biomedical modification of emotion to result in better moral agency.
Chapter 4 raises the question of the extent to which the presence of moral
disagreement affects the application of MB? Section 4.1 explores the limitation of
the scope of the argument that MB may be implausible in the presence of moral
disagreement. In section 4.3 I examine the implications of fundamental moral
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disagreement for MB and argue that although moral disagreement may pose a
challenge for evaluation of MB applications, there is no reason to favour the
status
quo
in the outcome of this deliberation.
Chapter 5 asks whether using specifically biomedical means of moral modification
gives rise to a strong ethical reason to forgo using MB. After examining arguments
brought forward by critics of medicalization, I argue the process of medicalization
is in itself neutral, and only acquires meaning on the basis of what medicalization
allows us to do and what costs it brings with it.
Chapter 6 explores the concerns raised in relation to identity. I ask to what extent
MB may threaten the narrative identity of the agent and whether such threats can
give raise to strong moral reasons to forego the use of MB. After examining
attempts at base strong ethical objections to the use of MB on Schechtman’s and
Ricoeur’s accounts of narrative identity, I argue that narrative identity theories face
serious problems in providing strong ethical action-guiding reasons.
The last two chapters discuss the impact of MB on freedom and agency. Chapter 7
asks to what extent issues raised in relation to freedom in the discussion of
Savulescu and Persson’s (2012a) thought experiment called the God Machine call
the desirability of MB into doubt. I argue that although the discussion of the God
Machine allows for teasing out what we find important in agency (and I suggest
that the God Machine would threaten moral agency by affecting the ability of the
agent to engage with moral reasons in affected action thus undermining the creation
of one’s own free will), the conclusions that can be applied from this discussion to
real-world MB are limited.
Chapter 8 asks in what way could real-world agent-led MB endanger and facilitate
moral agency. I critically examine Harris’ (2011) objection that MB would be
beyond moral review. Further, I consider MB in the context of Aristotelian
framework and limitations of self-control and argue that we should aim for virtue.
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