Transhumanism, our pluralist moral duties to the poor and how to effectively address global poverty
Date
2014
Authors
Rodriguez Valdes, Hector
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Canberra, ACT : The Australian National University
Abstract
Prominent transhumanists Julian Savulescu, Ingmar Persson, and Thomas Douglas argue that moral enhancement could solve global poverty. They argue that by engineering individuals with better moral dispositions, they will have better motives, and therefore the will to act more morally. These morally
enhanced individuals will more effectively discharge their duties regarding global
poverty, thus leading to more rapid poverty alleviation. In this paper I will present an account of the moral duties wealthy individuals hold
to the global poor. These moral duties are not singular (either to do no harm or to
provide assistance), but rather are complex and pluralist, and dependent on the
position of the agent with regards to the global poor. Further, I will argue that the
moral enhancement some transhumanists are envisioning to alleviate poverty fails
to recognize the pluralist duties wealthy individuals have regarding poverty
alleviation. In fact, moral enhancement would be counterproductive by virtue of i)
failing to recognize our various moral reasons to alleviate global poverty ii)
failing to allow individuals to evaluate their moral duties to others, therefore to
effectively discharge them, and iii) that failing to recognize i) & ii) would bring
about morally undesirable consequences; ineffective poverty alleviation and
enhanced-individuals’ loss of autonomy. Therefore, even if we grant that
individuals have only one reason to alleviate global poverty, it is not clear how
moral enhancement can effectively address global poverty, since poverty
alleviation is an issue that requires political, economic and institutional action. In the first section of this thesis I will review transhumanism, specifically the
"moral enhancement"(ME) proposition. In the second section I will present my
pluralist account of the moral duties affluent individuals have to the poor. In the
third section, I will analyse the transhumanist's proposal to alleviate global
poverty via moral enhancement, and I will contrast their argument with my
pluralist account of moral duties in order to determine if ME will achieve poverty
reduction.
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Keywords
moral, duty, poor, poverty, global, transhumanism
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Thesis (Masters sub-thesis)
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Open Access
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