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Erschienen in: Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 3/2019

05.07.2019 | Critical Response

Enhanced Interrogation, Consequential Evaluation, and Human Rights to Health

verfasst von: Benedict S. B. Chan

Erschienen in: Journal of Bioethical Inquiry | Ausgabe 3/2019

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Abstract

Balfe argues against enhanced interrogation. He particularly focuses on the involvement of U.S. healthcare professionals in enhanced interrogation. He identifies several empirical and normative factors and argues that they are not good reasons to morally justify enhanced interrogation. I argue that his argument can be improved by making two points. First, Balfe considers the reasoning of those healthcare professionals as utilitarian. However, careful consideration of their ideas reveals that their reasoning is consequential rather than utilitarian evaluation. Second, torture is a serious human rights abuse. When healthcare professionals become involved in enhanced interrogation, they violate not only human rights against torture but also human rights to health. Considering the consequential reasoning against human rights abuses, healthcare professionals’ involvement in enhanced interrogation is not morally justified. Supplementing Balfe’s position with these two points makes his argument more complete and convincing, and hence it can contribute to the way which shows that enhanced interrogation is not justified by consequential evaluation.
Fußnoten
1
As Sen (2000) mentions, his view is about consequential evaluation, which is “seen as the discipline of responsible choice based on the chooser's evaluation of states of affairs, including consideration of all the relevant consequences viewed in the light of the exact circumstances of that choice” (477). And he also thinks whether “consequential evaluation should be called by the name ‘consequentialism’ or not is a subsidiary and rather uninteresting issue” (477–478). For simplicity, I use these two terms “consequential evaluation” and “consequentialism” interchangeably in this paper.
 
2
For simplicity, the version I discuss here is the classical utilitarianism (i.e., hedonist utilitarianism). A particular important point is that the classical utilitarianism assumes that happiness means pleasure, which means it identifies the good with pleasure. For other versions of utilitarianism (especially a comparison between hedonist utilitarianism and preference utilitarianism), see Lazari-Radek and Singer (2014, 200–284; 2017, 42–52).
 
3
Both Article 5 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and Article 7 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights state: “No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”
 
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Metadaten
Titel
Enhanced Interrogation, Consequential Evaluation, and Human Rights to Health
verfasst von
Benedict S. B. Chan
Publikationsdatum
05.07.2019
Verlag
Springer Singapore
Erschienen in
Journal of Bioethical Inquiry / Ausgabe 3/2019
Print ISSN: 1176-7529
Elektronische ISSN: 1872-4353
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11673-019-09927-z

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