Article Text
Abstract
In his excellent essay, ‘Nudges in a post-truth world’, Neil Levy argues that ‘nudges to reason’, or nudges which aim to make us more receptive to evidence, are morally permissible. A strong argument against the moral permissibility of nudging is that nudges fail to respect the autonomy of the individuals affected by them. Levy argues that nudges to reason do respect individual autonomy, such that the standard autonomy objection fails against nudges to reason. In this paper, I argue that Levy fails to show that nudges to reason respect individual autonomy.
- ethics
- political science
- public policy
Statistics from Altmetric.com
Footnotes
Contributors GK is the sole author of this work.
Funding Arts and Humanities Research Council (South, West and Wales Doctoral Training Partnership PhD Studentship).
Competing interests None declared.
Provenance and peer review Commissioned; internally peer reviewed.
Linked Articles
- Extended essay
- Response
Read the full text or download the PDF:
Other content recommended for you
- The truth behind conscientious objection in medicine
- Conscientious objection and the referral requirement as morally permissible moral mistakes
- Ethics needs principles—four can encompass the rest—and respect for autonomy should be “first among equals”
- Parental obligation and compelled caesarean section: careful analogies and reliable reasoning about individual cases
- Nudges in a post-truth world
- The bioethical principles and Confucius’ moral philosophy
- Guerrilla eugenics: gene drives in heritable human genome editing
- Good parents would not fulfil their obligation to genetically enhance their unborn children
- Physician-assisted dying and two senses of an incurable condition
- Rights