Moral enhancement and cheapened achievement: Psychedelics, virtual reality and AI
- Author: mycolabadmin
- 11/20/2024
- View Source
Summary
Background
The ‘Cheapened Achievement Argument’ (CAA) has been applied to cognitive and athletic enhancement, suggesting that performance-improving drugs or technologies diminish the value of resulting achievements. This critique has received considerably less attention in the domain of moral enhancement, where the question of whether using biotechnologies rather than traditional moral development methods would cheapen moral achievements remains underexplored.
Objective
To examine whether the Cheapened Achievement Argument applies to moral enhancement and to determine if more realistic and viable forms of moral enhancement can evade this critique. The authors specifically investigate three examples of adjunctive-facilitative moral enhancement: psychedelics, Socratic AI, and virtual reality-based empathy training.
Results
Conclusion
- Published in:Bioethics,
- Study Type:Philosophical Analysis,
- Source: PMID: 39564905