Sports

March 13, 2008

Michael Sandel on Genetic Enhancement in Sports

You can now listen to my interview with  Harvard Professor Michael Sandel on the ethics of using genetic enhancement in sports on Ethics Bites (a transcript is also available).  You can also read a blog post I wrote for the Open University site Open2.net.

Michael Sandel's summary of the main themes of his book The Case Against Perfection.

Listen to Michael Sandel interviewed about Genetic Enhancement and Sport for Ethics Bites

Watch a video of Michael Sandel lecturing on Justice

November 09, 2007

Book Review: Michael Sandel -The Case Against Perfection

Biotechnology is opening up many possibilities. Athletes will soon be able to choose to inject substances that will produce genetic modifications that will dramatically improve their performance; parents will be able to specify many genetically controlled qualities for their offspring. This is not the world our parents and grandparents inhabited. How should we treat these developments?

In his short, highly-readable book The Case Against Perfection: Ethics in the Age of Genetic Engineering, Michael Sandel comes out firmly against the pursuit of perfection by genetic enhancement. He, of course, defends biotechnical solutions to medical problems. It is when we attempt to ehance ourselves and others genetically that he objects.

Much of his argument turns on his notion of 'giftedness'. An athlete, for example, has a natural genetic endowment. According to Sandel, to go beyond this 'gift' is a kind of hubris on our part, a Promethean project that involves playing God. This sounds like a theological position. But Sandel believes his reasoning should have force with secularists too.

For Sandel there are three features of our moral landscape that will be transformed if we succumb to this desire to play God:

1. Humility. We will lose the sense of reverence that is appropriate to our fate. Instead we will end up acting with hubris towards our nature.

2. Responsibility. With increases in choice about what we are, responsibility explodes. The consequence will be burdensome.

3. Perhaps most important, though, is solidarity. Sandel believes that the price of enhancement would be a loss of human solidarity. Once we lose the sense that we are subject to contingencies of fate, the successful will, even more than now, see themselves as self-made.

Sandel's message is clear:

Rather than employ our new genetic powers to straighten 'the crooked timber of humanity,' we should do what we can to create social and political arrangements more hospitable to the gifts and limitations of imperfect human beings (p. 97)

Much of Sandel's argument will appeal to religious believers, particularly those who seek humility before God's will. But for atheists and agnostics, this may be harder to stomach. Why not improve ourselves if we can? Think of how wonderful it would be if we could increase the number of geniuses per capita, particularly if we could give them a compassion gene and a desire to improve the lot of humanity...In the area of sport much of Sandel's argument turns on his belief that watching bionic athletes slugging it out would become mere spectacle, and that part of what we value in sport is the limitations of the athletes. I'm not so sure about this. I'd like to watch a football match in which every player achieved the skill level of George Best or Maradonna. And watching the top marathon runners today is already like watching bionic athletes, but no less absorbing for us mere mortals.

Whether or not Sandel is right about these issues, this is a clear, entertaining and stimulating book about a topic that matters. Underlying it are major questions about what we value and why that any thinking person will want to address.

October 25, 2006

Not Quite 'This Sporting Life' - My Days as a Rugby League Player

A short piece that was included in the Cambridge University Rugby League USA Tour brochure, 2006 [336 KB pdf].Download tackling.pdf

September 08, 2006

Cheating in Sport

I wrote this piece just before the 2006 World Cup - before Zidane's headbut, Wayne Rooney's sending off, and all the cricket ball-tampering allegations. It was broadcast on BBC Radio 4's Sport's Programme.
Download sportscheat.rtf [8KB rtf]

My Photo

Subscribe to RSS Feed

Get Virtual Philosopher by email...

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Philosophy: The Classics

Philosophy Bites

Ethics Bites

My Art and Photography Weblog