
'how To Be Good?' Is The Pre-eminent Question For Ethics, Although One That Philosophers And Ethicists Seldom Address Head On. Knowing How To Be Good, Or Perhaps (more Modestly And More Accurately) Knowing How To Go About Trying To Be Good, And The Ways In Which It Is Pointless Or Self-defeating To Try To Be Good, Is Of Immense Theoretical And Practical Importance. And What Goes For Trying To Be Good Oneself, Goes Also For Trying To Provide Others With Ways Of Being Good, And For Trying To Make Them Good Whether They Like It Or Not. This Is What Is Meant By 'moral Enhancement'. There Are Many Proposed Methodologies Or Technologies For Moral Enhancement. Some Of Them Are Ancient And/or Familiar: We May Attempt Moral Enhancement By Setting A Good Example, By Good Parenting, By Education Or Training, By Peer Pressure, By Telling Stories With A Moral, In Words Or In Pictures, And So On. We Can Imbibe Substances With Mood Changing Or Motivational Effects. We Can Also Use Medical, Biological, Or Other Scientific Means; We Can Search For And Deploy Chemicals, Or Biological Or Molecular Agents, Which We Believe Will Change People For The Better; And We Can Modify The Environment To Make Bad Outcomes Of All Sorts Less Likely. We Can Experiment With Political And Social Systems, Institutions, And Arrangements Designed To Make The World A Better Place Or People Better People. The Question Whether And To What Extent Moral Enhancement Is Possible Is The Subject Of This Book.
This book investigates the theoretical and practical feasibility of moral enhancement, questioning whether individuals can or should be improved through various methodologies. John B. Harris, a scholar in the field of ethics, examines the spectrum of moral improvement ranging from traditional social conditioning to modern biological and technological interventions. The text argues that the pursuit of goodness is often fraught with self-defeating paradoxes and explores the ethical implications of attempting to impose moral standards upon others.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the discourse on bioethics and the philosophy of human improvement. Readers frequently note the analytical density of the prose, which requires careful engagement with the author's arguments regarding the limits of moral intervention.
Page Count:
192
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
019101723X
ISBN-13:
9780191017230
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