Research Keyword: moral bioenhancement

Moral enhancement and cheapened achievement: Psychedelics, virtual reality and AI

This paper examines whether using drugs or technology to become a more moral person cheapens the value of that achievement, similar to debates about ‘cheating’ through cognitive enhancers. The authors argue that realistic applications of psychedelics, virtual reality, and AI—when used to facilitate rather than replace moral learning—can actually preserve what makes moral improvement valuable: our own effort, reflection, and engagement with moral reasons.

Read More »

Love (Drugs), Happiness, and Morality

This paper argues that love, happiness, and moral behavior create a self-reinforcing cycle: moral actions increase happiness, happiness promotes loving feelings, and love encourages more moral behavior. The author proposes that psilocybin and other love-enhancing drugs could strengthen this beneficial cycle, making them an ethical way for people to voluntarily improve themselves and society without requiring government mandates.

Read More »
Scroll to Top