Human Enhancement and Well-Being

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A01=Emma C. Gordon
achievement value theory
applied ethics
authenticity
Author_Emma C. Gordon
bioconservatism
bioethics debate
Brain Computer Interfaces
Category=JHBA
Category=QDTK
Category=QDTQ
emerging technology
Emma C. Gordon
enhancement counseling
Enhancement Counsellor
Enhancement Proposal
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
familial relationships
Frankfurt Style Cases
freedom to fall
Genetic Enhancement
Harris's Argument
human enhancement
human nature
hyperagency
individual well-being
inequality
Informed Consent
Internal Factor Condition
interpersonal well-being
Love Drugs
Moral Bioenhancement
Moral Enhancement
moral philosophy
Negative Attachments
Objective List Theories
Parental Love
Partick Thistle
Particularist Condition
philosophy of technology
Positive Enhancement
Positive Proposal
Relationship Enhancement
Robust Love
romantic relationships
social epistemology
Socratic Questioning
Supervenience Base
Unfulfilled Desires
value of achievements
voluntary human enhancement counseling
Welfarist Conception
well-being

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367702205
  • Weight: 331g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Dec 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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New technologies and medicines make it increasingly possible to enhance human functioning in new ways: to become smarter, more emotionally attuned, and perhaps even morally better. But just because we can use the latest science to improve ourselves, should we?

This book has two main aims. First, it outlines and criticises the six main contemporary arguments for scepticism about the role of human enhancements in promoting well-being. These arguments concern, respectively, (i) the value of achievements, (ii) freedom, (iii) hyperagency, (iv) human nature, (v) authenticity, and (vi) inequality. It will be shown – for the first time in a book-length treatment – why the overarching bioconservative case against enhancement doesn’t hold water. The second central aim of the book is positive; as we’ll see, each of the bioconservative critiques considered and rejected will be shown to nonetheless motivate a distinctive kind of theoretical desideratum that a viable positive enhancement proposal should satisfy. The remainder of the book then defends a two-part enhancement proposal that will be shown to clearly satisfy the theoretical desiderata that emerged from reflecting on the earlier critique of bioconservativism. The first part of the positive proposal motivates and outlines the general role of an enhancement counsellor in facilitating voluntary enhancement; I then offer an applied case study of this role in the special case of enhancement for the purpose of facilitating romantic and parental relationships.

Human Enhancement and Well-Being: A Case for Optimism will be of interest to scholars and advanced students working in applied ethics, bioethics, philosophy of technology, philosophy of well-being, and social epistemology.

Emma C. Gordon is a Lecturer in Applied Ethics at the University of Glasgow, UK. Her expertise is mainly in applied ethics (especially bioethics) and social epistemology. Her work has appeared in such places as Ethical Theory and Moral Practice, Bioethics, The Journal of Applied Philosophy, Neuroethics, and Philosophical Psychology.

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