Is human enhancement a threat to solidarity?

Authors

  • Ruud ter Meulen University of Bristol, Centre for Ethics in Medicine, School of Social and Community Medicine

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.19272/201700702005

Keywords:

Human enhancement, Ethics, Justice, Solidarity, Reflective solidarity, Recognition of the other

Abstract

In this article, I analyse the possible impact of human enhancement on social and moral relations, particularly the alleged threat on social solidarity and collective responsibility for vulnerable individuals in our society. The article starts with a short philosophical reflection on human enhancement technologies, followed by an analysis of the communitarian critique of human enhancement as a threat to solidarity. It continues with a discussion of the access to human enhancement technologies and the impact on disadvantaged groups seen from the perspective of distributive justice as well as from the idea of humanitarian solidarity. An important part of the article discusses the idea of solidarity as a concept that expresses the relation of responsibility and recognition of identities and the impact human enhancement may have on this relation. Finally, I will introduce the concept of ‘reflective solidarity’ which argues that individualisation and solidarity do not oppose each other as claimed by communitarian authors. In the conclusion, I will argue that human enhancement technologies are not necessarily resulting in social fragmentation and diminished social responsibility if they are introduced in a reflective approach which pays attention to individual autonomy and social values at the same time.

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Published

30-09-2017

How to Cite

ter Meulen, Ruud. “Is Human Enhancement a Threat to Solidarity?”. Acta Philosophica 26, no. 2 (September 30, 2017): 307–322. Accessed July 16, 2024. https://www.actaphilosophica.it/article/view/3762.

Issue

Section

Monographic section