Article info
Law, ethics and medicine
Paper
‘My child will never initiate Ultimate Harm’: an argument against moral enhancement
- Correspondence to Dr Ryan Tonkens, Centre for Human Bioethics, Monash University, Clayton, VIC 3168, Australia; ryan.tonkens{at}monash.edu
Citation
‘My child will never initiate Ultimate Harm’: an argument against moral enhancement
Publication history
- Received September 30, 2013
- Revised February 3, 2014
- Accepted March 26, 2014
- First published April 19, 2014.
Online issue publication
February 20, 2015
Article Versions
- Previous version (19 April 2014).
- You are viewing the most recent version of this article.
Request permissions
If you wish to reuse any or all of this article please use the link below which will take you to the Copyright Clearance Center’s RightsLink service. You will be able to get a quick price and instant permission to reuse the content in many different ways.
Copyright information
Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions
Other content recommended for you
- Good parents would not fulfil their obligation to genetically enhance their unborn children
- The perils of failing to enhance: a response to Persson and Savulescu
- Technological moral enhancement or traditional moral progress? Why not both?
- Reply to commentators on Unfit for the Future
- Why is it possible to enhance moral status and why doing so is wrong?
- Putting a price on empathy: against incentivising moral enhancement
- Too good for this world: moral bioenhancement and the ethics of making moral misfits
- Voluntary moral enhancement and the survival-at-any-cost bias
- Amoral enhancement
- Why we can't really say what post-persons are