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Procreative beneficence, intelligence, and the optimisation problem

Procreative beneficence, intelligence, and the optimisation problem
Procreative beneficence, intelligence, and the optimisation problem
According to the Principle of Procreative Beneficence, reproducers should choose the child, of those available to them, expected to have the best life. Savulescu argues reproducers are therefore morally obligated to select for nondisease traits, such as intelligence. Carter and Gordon recently challenged this implication, arguing that Savulescu fails to establish that intelligence promotes well-being. This paper develops two responses. First, I argue that higher intelligence is likely to contribute to well-being on most plausible accounts. Second, I argue that, even if it does not, one can only resist the conclusion that reproducers should select on the basis of intelligence if its expected net effect is neutral. If intelligence reduces expected well-being, then reproducers should select offspring of low intelligence. More likely, the effect of increased intelligence on expected well-being varies at different levels, which makes identifying an optimum for well-being more complex than hitherto appreciated.
0360-5310
653-668
Saunders, Ben
aed7ba9f-f519-4bbf-a554-db25b684037d
Saunders, Ben
aed7ba9f-f519-4bbf-a554-db25b684037d

Saunders, Ben (2015) Procreative beneficence, intelligence, and the optimisation problem. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 40 (6), 653-668. (doi:10.1093/jmp/jhv026).

Record type: Article

Abstract

According to the Principle of Procreative Beneficence, reproducers should choose the child, of those available to them, expected to have the best life. Savulescu argues reproducers are therefore morally obligated to select for nondisease traits, such as intelligence. Carter and Gordon recently challenged this implication, arguing that Savulescu fails to establish that intelligence promotes well-being. This paper develops two responses. First, I argue that higher intelligence is likely to contribute to well-being on most plausible accounts. Second, I argue that, even if it does not, one can only resist the conclusion that reproducers should select on the basis of intelligence if its expected net effect is neutral. If intelligence reduces expected well-being, then reproducers should select offspring of low intelligence. More likely, the effect of increased intelligence on expected well-being varies at different levels, which makes identifying an optimum for well-being more complex than hitherto appreciated.

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Accepted/In Press date: November 2014
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 October 2015
Published date: 1 December 2015
Organisations: Faculty of Social, Human and Mathematical Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 370373
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/370373
ISSN: 0360-5310
PURE UUID: d29c91ea-2423-4e49-872c-6feb4a23e751
ORCID for Ben Saunders: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5147-6397

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Date deposited: 22 Oct 2014 13:37
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:50

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