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The Morality Pill: The Ethics of Moral Enhancement

€23.00


Matteo Galletti

Trans. Steven Umbrello

Publication date: January, 2025

Pages: 90

Copyright © 2022 by Fandango Libri s.r.l.


ISBN 978-615-6696-38-0                        Paperback, €23.00

ISBN 978-615-6696-39-7                        Hardcover, €39.00

eISBN 978-615-6696-40-3                       eBook, €23.00

Paperbacks will be available on our website from February 2025. For preorders with fast deliveries please send us an email at publishing@trivent-pulishing.eu.


For any unavailable copies on our website, please refer to our distributors: ISD LLC for North and South America and Mare Nostrum for Europe and the rest of the world.

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

Translator’s Foreword

Steven Umbrello


INTRODUCTION. Dilemmas. How to Morally Augment Humanity


CHAPTER 1. What is Moral Bio-enhancement?

   What is Enhancement?

   Moral (bio-)enhancement

   Why Do We Need Moral Bio-enhancement?


CHAPTER 2. What Does Moral Bio-enhancement Augment?

   What Morality are We Speaking of?

   The Moral Brain

   What Should We Enhance? Sentiments or Reason?

   What Do We Need to Enhance? Capacities or People?


CHAPTER 3. Does Moral Bio-enhancement Negate Our Liberty?

   The Meanings of Liberty

   The Freedom to “Fall”

   The Value of Liberty


CHAPTER 4. Is Moral Bio-enhancement Also Unacceptable?

   Moral Progress and Moral Improvement

   Do Morally Acceptable Bio-enhancements Exist?


References

Data sheet

Author(s)
Matteo Galletti
Imprint
TRIVENT Ethics in Science & Technology
Book series
Applied Ethics: From Bioethics to Environmental Ethics
Volume no.
5
Book series editor(s)
János I. Tóth
ISBN (hardcover)
978-615-6696-39-7
ISBN (paperback)
978-615-6696-38-0
eISBN
978-615-6696-40-3
Publication date
January, 2025
Page numbers
90

Specific References

Human beings have always wanted to become more just and more altruistic, and hoped that future generations would be morally better than the last. In the past, education, teaching, self-discipline, reading, knowledge, and moral exemplars were the main ways to achieve this. But these methods are sometimes ineffective and take a long time to work, especially in the global context where the survival of the human species is threatened by environmental disasters, pandemics, and terrorism. Some writers claim that to deal with these tremendous challenges, we need to find better ways to make people more moral. Genetics, neuroscience, and pharmacology might allow us to alter human biology to make people more generous, compassionate, and empathic. But the moral bio-enhancement project raises many questions: which human traits or dispositions should we change? Should we change emotions or reason? Does moral bio-enhancement allow for freedom? What kind of freedom does it threaten? Are we already practicing forms of moral bio-enhancement without realizing it?

This book tries to answer these questions, providing a map of the debate about moral enhancement.

Matteo Galletti is Associate Professor of Bioethics at the University of Florence, Italy. He works on ethical theory and applied ethics, with a focus on topics such as biotechnology, artificial intelligence and behavioral influence.

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