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Monday, January 30, 2017

Episode #18: Jonathan Pugh on Bio-Conservatism and Human Enhancement

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In this episode I talk to Jonathan Pugh about bio-conservatism and human enhancement. Jonny is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Applied Moral Philosophy at The University of Oxford, on the Wellcome Trust funded project "Neurointerventions in Crime Prevention: An Ethical Analysis". His new paper, written with Guy Kahane and Julian Savulescu,  'Bio-Conservatism, Partiality, and The Human Nature Objection to Enhancement' is due out soon in The Monist.

You can download the episode here or listen below. You can also subscribe on Stitcher and iTunes (via RSS).


Show Notes


  • 0:00 - introduction 
  • 2:00 - what is the nature of human enhancement – the functionalist and welfarist accounts/models 
  • 10:30 - bio-conservative oppositions to enhancement – evaluative and epistemic approaches, the naturalistic fallacy 
  • 19:00 - Cohen’s conservatism – intrinsic value – personal and particular valuing – art and pets
  • 30:30 – personal values and bio-enhancement 
  • 40:30 - the partiality problem – who would you save from the river? Value-based partiality and discrimination. 
  • 54:00 - species bias, human prejudice, partiality, family and nationalism - Bernard Williams, John Cottingham, Thomas Hurka, Samuel Scheffler, genetic enhancement 
  • 1:03:00 -  should human enhancement be opposed on the grounds of bio-conservatism? - Biological enhancement in the context of other social and technical changes - Is conservatism a foundational moral principle? 
  • 1:11:00 - conclusion


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