sylvar: (Default)
[personal profile] sylvar
...and now I'm awake again, and already wondering what kind of work has been done on this sort of thing.

What kinds of altering one's consciousness do we have moral permission for?  Would a neurotypical person have the moral right to use memory-enhancing drugs?  Would a person with a mental illness have the moral right to use 'corrective' (antipsychotic, antidepressive, etc.) drugs?  For that matter, would a person with a mental illness have some duty to use corrective drugs?  Is there a right and/or duty to use psychedelics?  What about the moral right to use memory-suppressing drugs following a traumatic experience?  Does it matter whether one hacks his own brain for the purpose of entertainment rather than success or service to humanity?  Does it matter whether one alters or extends one's cognitive functions by nanotechnology, chemical supplements, or simply reading thought-provoking books?

If I were to get into philosophy on my own, I think this would be an area of interest.  I'll have to come up with a suitably outrageous scenario to illustrate the topic, of course.  Perhaps a society of music lovers has kidnapped a great violinist and wishes to force her to take experimental but effective drugs that will make her into the greatest violinist that the world has ever known, for the purpose of benefiting humanity by creating transcendently beautiful recordings that will stimulate a new burst of interest in the fine arts.  Would she have the moral right to refuse to do so?  Later, when she had been released, if she reconsidered the idea, would she have the moral right to take the same drugs?  What if the motive were merely to profit by selling the recordings?

Date: 2007-01-03 03:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sylvar.livejournal.com
Well, I'm definitely trying to avoid the legal meaning of 'right'; what I had in mind is something like 'it would be permissible, from an ethical standpoint, to do so'. What THAT means is a whole different story; some say that there's an actual meaning to terms like 'right' and 'wrong', and others say that when you say "it is wrong to do that", you're really just saying "I personally disapprove of it".

Date: 2007-01-03 03:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] danasdream.livejournal.com
Well, my take is there is definitely a "right" and "wrong." And obviously, the "legal" definitions of things are informed by the moral thinking of the decision makers involved (or at least they should be).

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