Enhancement and Cheating moreExpositions 2.2 (2008): 153-156 |
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[Expositions 2.2 (2008) 153-156]
doi:10.1558/expo.v2i2.153
Expositions (print) ISSN 1747-5368
Expositions (online) ISSN 1747-5376
Enhancement and Cheating
REBECCA ROACHE
Future of Humanity Institute
Oxford University
A common worry expressed about the use of pharmacological cognitive
enhancements such as Modafinil and Ritalin is that using them constitutes
cheating (Fukuyama 2002; Henderson 2008). Those who enhance in this
way are better placed to beat their unenhanced peers to the top educational
qualifications and jobs; accordingly enhancing is unfair. Is this worry justi-
fied?
The worry about cheating is often bound up with other worries about
enhancement. These include concerns about safety addictiveness, and acces-
sibility. These concerns can be addressed independently of the concern about
cheating, and so, to avoid complicating matters, let us assume that cognitive
enhancement is safe to use, that it is non-addictive, and that it is accessible
to everyone, not just the rich. Ought we still to be worried about the fairness
of cognitive enhancement? Well, in the absence of these ancillary concerns,
one of the issues that remain is that those who choose not to enhance will
be at a disadvantage, left behind in the race for the best qualifications and
jobs by their enhanced peers. Is this fair? Should people be free to use drugs
like Modafinil and Ritalin to get ahead, or should education authorities and
employers ban such enhancement, perhaps introducing urine tests to ensure
that this ban is enforced, as Cambridge neuroscientist Sir Gabriel Horn has
recently been quoted to suggest (Henderson 2008)?
We can start with a terminological point. Whether or not the use of cogni-
tive enhancement drugs constitutes cheating depends on whether the use of
such drugs is forbidden in the rules of the game. Currently, the rules to which
students and employees must adhere typically forbid activities like plagia-
rism, forging references, and lying about one's educational and employment
history—and those students and employees who break these rules can expect
to be punished. Rules against the use of cognitive enhancement drugs are not
currently widespread. Ought they to be?
The answer to this question depends on what we think is more important: a
level playing field on which students and employees can compete equally for
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154 Enhancement and Cheating
qualifications and jobs, or the value of the achievements made through such
competition. In some areas of life, the main purpose is to advance knowl-
edge, and so maximizing the achievements made is plausibly more important
than having a level playing field. As Anders Sandberg has commented, "that
many of the theorems of the mathematician Paul Erdos were proven under
the influence of amphetamines does not diminish their intellectual brilliance
or importance" (Sandberg 2008). And, in the quest for a cure for cancer, if
it turns out that cognitively enhanced scientists would be able to discover a
cure more quickly than unenhanced scientists, then using cognitive enhance-
ment could result in millions of lives being saved. In other areas of life, it is
extremely important to remain alert and focused. For those working as airline
pilots or surgeons, the consequences of a lapse in concentration could be dire.
Cognitive enhancement could help prevent such lapses. These examples dem-
onstrate that, while fairness is important, avoidably slowing the advancement
of scientific knowledge or reducing the alertness of airline pilots and surgeons
is too high a price to pay to ensure that those who do not wish to enhance are
able to compete on a level playing field.
In other areas of life, however, competition is more important. A key pur-
pose of education in schools and universities is to enable students to compete
for the best qualifications. Should cognitive enhancement be banned in such
contexts? There are at least two good reasons to answer "no" to this question.
First, even if competition for qualifications is a valuable aspect of education,
it is not the only valuable aspect. As well as enabling one to gain educational
qualifications, studying also enables students to understand more about the
world and the people in it, and to enrich themselves intellectually and cultur-
ally. If it turns out that cognitive enhancement enables students to increase
the extent to which they understand the world and enrich themselves, then
banning it in the interest of ensuring fairer competition for qualifications
would be too hasty. In order to decide whether or not to ban it, we would first
need to assess whether the value to be gained from banning it and thereby
ensuring a fair competition would outweigh the value to be gained from
allowing students to enjoy the non-competitive aspects of education more
intensely with the aid of cognitive enhancement.
However, banning cognitive enhancement in education would not ensure
that students are able to compete on a level playing field. This is the sec-
ond reason to answer "no" to the question posed above. Consider that, even
without access to drugs like Modafinil and Ritalin, most students have to
compete with other students who are naturally more intelligent, disciplined,
alert, and focused. As such, most students are already at a disadvantage.
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It may be objected that, in aiming at a level playing field, we should ignore
such "natural" advantages, and concentrate only on ensuring that students
have equal opportunities to achieve the best grades given their existing abili-
ties. However, even this does not leave us with a level playing field. Some
students are able and willing to employ personal tutors; others are not. Some
students spend most of their time out of school studying; others spend their
time out of school relaxing or working to earn money. Some students use
caffeine or computer software to aid their studying—both of which are types
of cognitive enhancement—others do not. Such practices ensure that, even
without novel methods of cognitive enhancement, students do not compete
on a level playing field. And, that schools and universities do not currently
outlaw the use of personal tutors, caffeine, and studying outside of school
suggests that maximizing the extent to which students compete on a level
playing field is not as important as some opponents of enhancement suggest.
An uneven playing field may even be seen as advantageous, in that it can
drive students to work harder as they attempt to beat their peers. As such, it
is far from obvious that we should aim to create a level playing field by limit-
ing the ways in which students can compete. At the very least, opponents of
enhancement need to demonstrate exactly why using drugs like Modafinil
and Ritalin is relevantly different from employing a personal tutor or drink-
ing coffee to remain alert.
There is something important to learn from the worry about unfair com-
petition, however. As far as possible, it is desirable to discourage the pursuit
of what the economist Fred Hirsch has called "positional goods": those goods
whose value to those who have them depends on others not having them.
This is because the collective pursuit of positional goods is a waste of time
and resources: as Hirsch remarked, "if everyone stands on tiptoe, no one
sees better" (Hirsch 1977, 5). If the value of cognitive enhancement rests
solely on its ability to enable one to compete better than others for things
like educational qualifications, then its use should be discouraged. How-
ever, it is unlikely that the value of cognitive enhancement is exhausted by
the positional goods it confers. We have seen that it may have value in ena-
bling people like scientists, airline pilots, and surgeons to do their jobs more
effectively. And, even in education, where competition for qualifications plays
a central role, cognitive enhancement could add value by enabling students
to make the most of the non-competitive elements. There is a clear case for
banning cognitive enhancement in education only if the value of education is
exhausted by the competition for qualifications, because only in such a case is
cognitive enhancement a purely positional good when used in the context of
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156 Enhancement and Cheating
education. There may be some who wish to argue that the value of education
is indeed exhausted by the competition for qualifications, and that anyone
who believes otherwise is an academic fantasist. However, if this is the case,
then the qualifications for which students compete are themselves purely
positional goods, and so the argument to ban cognitive enhancement also
works to ban educational qualifications.
The worry about cheating is not, as a result, sufficient justification for ban-
ning the use of cognitive enhancement drugs. Arguably, the worry about
enhancement and cheating is usually overblown. The most important con-
cerns about such enhancement are perhaps those that I initially disregarded:
safety, addictiveness, and accessibility. Since these concerns are also among
the most philosophically uninteresting, it should not be surprising that phil-
osophical debate about enhancement gravitates instead towards issues like
cheating. As in many debates in applied philosophy, however, we must take
care not to allow what is most interesting to distract us from what is most
important.
References
Fukuyama, F.
2002 Our Posthuman Future. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
Henderson, M.
2008 Academy of Medical Sciences Suggests Urine Tests to Detect Smart Drugs.
The Times, 22 May 2008.
Sandberg, A.
2008 Brain Boosting and Cheating in Exams: Four Responses. Practical Ethics:
Ethical Perspectives on the News blog (www.practicalethicsnews.com/practi-
calethics/2008/05/brain-boosting.html).
Hirsch, F.
1977 Social Limits to Growth. London: Routledge and Kegal Paul.
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