lunes, 14 de noviembre de 2016

BioEdge: Is climate change denial a crime?

BioEdge: Is climate change denial a crime?
Bioedge
Is climate change denial a crime?
     

Free speech is one of the most treasured rights in Western democracy. However, ethicists are constantly making exceptions for points of view which they regards as particularly destructive and evil. In the latest issue of the Nordic Journal of Applied EthicsTrygve Lavik, a philosopher at the University of Bergen, argues that climate change denial is a crime and that it should be made illegal. He does not specify what penal sanctions should be imposed.
Climate denialism is not beneficial because its main goal is to produce doubt, and not truth. Climate denialism is not sincerely meant, which is a necessary condition for Mill to accept utterances. Climate denialists bring harm, by blocking necessary action on climate change. Primarily they harm future generations and people in developing countries.
Lavik attempts to distinguish between scepticism and denialism. Relying upon renowned sceptic Michael Shermer, he says that “denialism is typically driven by ideology and religious belief”. A refusal to accept the overwhelming preponderance of evidence is insincere if it masquerades as scepticism. It is plainly and simply denialism.
Lavik acknowledges that “The common view is … that free discussion is always a good thing.” Even though this comes straight from John Stuart Mill, the patron saint of utilitarianism, Lavik denies it. Mill did not foresee that modern psychology would discover that people are often unmoved by debate; they stick to their guns.
These findings challenge Mill’s utilitarian justification of the liberty principle. If free discussion does not work, if more debate does not lead to more truth, then free speech is not useful.
Why shouldn’t lots of other debates be silenced, then? Only because they are not so important. In Lavik’s eyes, climate change denialism is the most dangerous of all ideas because it poses an existential threat to humanity. It is far worse than Holocaust denialism (which is already banned in several European countries) because it affects future well-being.
Lavik’s arguments seem to have a certain relevance to countries like Canada, where euthanasia is being rolled out. It would be easy to construct an argument for banning all debate about legal euthanasia on the grounds of public safety. If euthanasia is a positive benefit, and if debate discourages people from taking advantage of it, surely debate must be banned. However, at the moment, only doctors' right to conscientious objection is being debated. 
Bioedge
Bioedge
The shock of this week’s Presidential election in the United States has overshadowed other winners and losers on election night. Big Marijuana was a winner. Four states have legalised recreational marijuana and another four medical marijuana. Assisted suicide was a winner, with voters in Colorado passing a ballot initiative legalising it.
A big loser was the polling industry, which failed to predict Trump’s astonishing victory. This comes after other surprises (ie, failures) in the Brexit debate and the peace accord in Colombia.
And this has made pollsters’ clients suspicious. “A corporate market research project, you don’t know if your polling is shit because there’s no election day,” Dan Wagner, head of Democratic research firm Civis Analytics, told the Wall Street Journal. In politics, “there’s a day where you’re going to find out whether you were right or whether you’re an idiot.”
Since polling has become a weapon in bioethics policy debates on issues like euthanasia, abortion, or stem cell research, perhaps we can feel a bit more justified in our scepticism about polls which purport to show what the public thinks. It would be silly to say that polling is broken, but it certainly needs a good grease-and-oil change.

Michael Cook
Editor
BioEdge
This week in BioEdge

by Michael Cook | Nov 12, 2016
It's hard to know what direction the President-elect will take

by Michael Cook | Nov 12, 2016
Cecile Richards insists that its doors will remain open

by Xavier Symons | Nov 12, 2016
Colorado has voted for assisted suicide, while three other US states have voted to legalise recreational marijuana.

by Xavier Symons | Nov 12, 2016
A UK bill that would restrict disability-selective abortion has passed its second reading.

by Xavier Symons | Nov 12, 2016
Should religious viewpoints be admitted to the euthanasia debate?

by Michael Cook | Nov 12, 2016
A Norwegian ethicist says Yes.

by Michael Cook | Nov 12, 2016
Shift from the 'reasonable doctor' to the 'reasonable patient'
BioEdge
Suite 12A, Level 2 | 5 George St | North Strathfield NSW 2137 | Australia
Phone: +61 2 8005 8605
Mobile: 0422-691-615
New Media Foundation | Level 2, 5 George St | North Strathfield NSW 2137 | AUSTRALIA | +61 2 8005 8605

No hay comentarios: