ABSTRACT

This volume presents articles which focus on the ethical evaluation of performance-enhancing technologies in sport. The collection considers whether drug doping should be banned; the rationale of not banning ethically contested innovations such as hypoxic chambers; and the implications of the prospects of human genetic engineering for the notion of sport as a development of ’natural’ talent towards human excellence. The essays demonstrate the significance of the principles of preventing harm, ensuring fairness and preserving meaning to appraise whether a particular performance enhancer is acceptable in the context of sport. Selected essays on various forms of human enhancement outside of sport that highlight other principles and concepts are included for comparative purpose. Sport enhancement provides a useful starting point to work through the ethics of enhancement in other human practices and endeavors, and sport enhancement ethics should track broader bioethical debates on human enhancement. As a whole, the volume points to the need to consider the values and meanings that people seek in a given sphere of human activity and their associated principles to arrive at a morally grounded and reasonable approach to enhancement ethics.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

part III|119 pages

Preserving the Spirit of Sport

chapter 14|30 pages

Annotating the Moral Map of Enhancement

Gene Doping, the Limits of Medicine, and the Spirit of Sport

chapter 16|10 pages

Listening to Steroids

chapter 17|20 pages

Rethinking Enhancement in Sport

part IV|54 pages

Sport and Human Enhancement

part V|135 pages

Enhancement beyond Sport

chapter 22|10 pages

The Case Against Perfection

What’s wrong with designer children, bionic athletes, and genetic engineering

chapter 25|11 pages

A Not-So-New Eugenics

Harris and Savulescu on Human Enhancement

chapter 26|10 pages

Moral Enhancement and Freedom