Cognitive Enhancements and the Values of Higher Education

Cognitive Enhancements and the Values of Higher Education, Health Care Analysis 20 (4), pp. 347-355 (2012)

9 Pages Posted: 31 May 2013

See all articles by Matt Lamkin

Matt Lamkin

University of Tulsa College of Law

Date Written: September 25, 2012

Abstract

Drugs developed to treat cognitive impairments are proving popular with healthy college students seeking to boost their focus and productivity. Concerned observers have called these practices a form of cheating akin to athletes’ use of steroids, with some proposing testing students’ urine to deter ‘‘academic doping.’’ The ease with which critics analogize the academic enterprise to competitive sport, and the impulse to crack down on students using study drugs, reflect the same social influences and trends that spur demand for these interventions — our hyper-competitive culture, the commodification of education, and our attraction to technological quick-fixes. Rather than focusing on the technologies that are being put to troubling uses, we would be better served reforming the culture that makes these practices attractive.

Keywords: Enhancement, Higher Education

Suggested Citation

Lamkin, Matt, Cognitive Enhancements and the Values of Higher Education (September 25, 2012). Cognitive Enhancements and the Values of Higher Education, Health Care Analysis 20 (4), pp. 347-355 (2012), Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2272201

Matt Lamkin (Contact Author)

University of Tulsa College of Law ( email )

3120 E. Fourth Place
Tulsa, OK 74104
United States

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