Levelling the playing field: on the alleged unfairness of the genetic lottery
Hauskeller, Michael
Date: 20 October 2016
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Abstract
It is frequently argued that human enhancement is not only morally permissible but also morally obligatory: we have a moral duty to provide people with opportunities to enhance themselves. This duty to enhance is sometimes believed to follow from the fact that our natural abilities are not evenly distributed, that what we can and cannot ...
It is frequently argued that human enhancement is not only morally permissible but also morally obligatory: we have a moral duty to provide people with opportunities to enhance themselves. This duty to enhance is sometimes believed to follow from the fact that our natural abilities are not evenly distributed, that what we can and cannot do is to a large extent the result of a ‘genetic (or natural) lottery’. Thus people’s chances in life are, through no fault of their own, hampered by a ‘genetic inequality’, which, being entirely undeserved is clearly unfair. To ensure fairness, we are thus morally obligated to redress the situation and ‘level the playing field’. However, it is not entirely clear whether it actually makes sense to declare a natural condition, which is not in any way the result of human agency and is thus not a proper subject of distributive justice, to be ‘unfair’. This chapter looks into this claim and investigates to what extent it is plausible.
Social and Political Sciences, Philosophy, and Anthropology
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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