
Unfit for the Future argues that the future of our species depends on our urgently finding ways to bring about radical enhancement of the moral aspects of our own human nature. We have rewritten our own moral agenda by the drastic changes we have made to the conditions of life on earth. Advances in technology enable us to exercise an influence that extends all over the world and far into the future. But our moral psychology lags behind and leaves us ill equipped to deal with the challenges we now face. We need to change human moral motivation so that we pay more heed not merely to the global community, but to the interests of future generations. It is unlikely that traditional methods such as moral education or social reform alone can bring this about swiftly enough to avert looming disaster, which would undermine the conditions for worthwhile life on earth forever. Persson and Savulescu maintain that it is likely that we need to explore the use of new technologies of biomedicine to change the bases of human moral motivation. They argue that there are in principle no philosophical or moral objections to such moral bioenhancement. Unfit for the Future challenges us to rethink our attitudes to our own human nature, before it is too late.
The authors investigate whether humanity must utilize biomedical technologies to enhance moral motivation to prevent global catastrophe. Ingmar Persson and Julian Savulescu, both prominent figures in practical ethics, argue that human moral psychology is evolutionarily ill-equipped to handle the scale and temporal reach of modern technological influence. They propose that traditional methods of moral improvement are insufficient to address existential risks, necessitating a shift toward direct biological intervention in human moral cognition.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
This text is widely recognized as a foundational contribution to the debate on moral bioenhancement within academic bioethics. Readers frequently note the rigorous philosophical density of the prose and the provocative nature of the authors' conclusions regarding human agency.
Page Count:
154
Publication Date:
2012-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191632872
ISBN-13:
9780191632877
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!