Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 February 2020
Self-ownership theorists argue that many of our most morally urgent and enforceable rights stem from the fact that we own ourselves. Critics of self-ownership argue that the claim that people own their bodies commits self-ownership theorists to several implausible conclusions because self-ownership theory relies on several vague moral predicates, and any precisification of the required predicates is seemingly too permissive (because it allows people to impose deadly risks on innocent bystanders for no reason) or too restrictive (because it prohibits people from polluting or even interacting with others at all). I argue that this line of criticism does not undermine the case for self-ownership theory because self-ownership theory does not require precisification of each moral concept that it is based on and, even if it did, the theory’s alleged extensional inadequacy does not undermine its justification.
1 Lippert-Rasmussen, Kasper, “Against Self-Ownership: There Are No Fact-Insensitive Ownership Rights over One’s Body,” Philosophy and Public Affairs 36, no. 1 (2008): 86–118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2 This means that in virtue of people being self-owners, they have the right to sell their labor or body parts. I qualified this because not all proponents of self-ownership think that people have the right to permanently sell their labor (e.g., slave contracts) or to sell their vital organs (e.g., heart markets). The objections to self-ownership that I am considering do not require that the thesis defend slave contracts and heart markets in order to succeed, and I needn’t settle this question about self-ownership theory for my response to these objections to succeed.
3 Sobel, David, “Backing Away from Libertarian Self-Ownership,” Ethics 123, no. 1 (2012): 32–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
4 On the Kantian view, it is a mistake to paternalistically prevent people from deciding what happens to their bodies because doing so would prioritize merely contingent values, like pleasure, over the intrinsic value of an autonomous person. More generally, since all autonomous people have this value, to interfere with a person’s choices about how her body is used involves a kind of contradiction in the will of the interferer, who cannot consistently assert that he has a right against interference while denying the same for other people. For a version of this argument, see Korsgaard, Christine M., The Sources of Normativity (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996). See alsoCrossRefGoogle Scholar Taylor, Robert, “A Kantian Defense of Self Ownership” Journal of Political Philosophy, 12, no. 1 (2004): 65–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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6 David Sobel, “Backing Away from Libertarian Self-Ownership,” 32–60.
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9 Cohen writes “[Dworkin] said that the principle of self-ownership is too indeterminate to pick out a distinct position in political philosophy. He reasoned as follows: to own something is to enjoy some or other set of rights with respect to that thing. But one might envisage a number of importantly different sets of rights over themselves and their own powers in virtue of which we could say of people that they are self-owners. The principle of self-ownership therefore lacks determinate content.” Cohen, G. A., Self-Ownership Freedom and Equality (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995), 213.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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12 David Sobel, “Backing Away From Libertarian Self-Ownership,” 33.
13 This is seemingly what the left libertarians, such as Michael Otsuka, Hillel Steiner, and Peter Valentine, try to do.
14 This is what some right libertarians, such as Robert Nozick, try to do.
15 I should note before I review the possibilities for vague self-ownership that not everyone accepts that moral vagueness is a coherent idea. Support for the possibility of moral vagueness may depend on one’s metaethical commitments, as Constantinescu argues. The following two sections will show that even if we do not accept that there is moral vagueness, boundary cases do not discredit the self-ownership thesis. Constantinescu, Cristian, “Moral Vagueness: A Dilemma for Non-Naturalism,” Oxford Studies in Metaethics 9 (2014): 152–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
16 There could be indeterminacy in the language we use to talk about the self, acceptable risk, and permissibility (semantic vagueness). Or the boundaries that define these predicates could be unknowable (epistemic vagueness). Ontic vagueness exists if indeterminacy about the predicates themselves would remain even if we used a perfect language to talk about self-ownership and knew all the relevant facts about each moral concept used in self-ownership theory and the application of that concept. Barnes, Elizabeth, “Ontic Vagueness: A Guide for the Perplexed,” Noûs 44, no. 4 (2010): 601–627.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
17 For example, the family of Henrietta Lacks claimed that they were entitled to compensation for their ancestor’s cancer cells. The famous case of Moore v. Regents of the University of California addressed but did not conclusively decide whether people had property rights to their genetic material. Narayanan, Nithya, “Patenting of Human Genetic Material v. Bioethics: Revisiting the Case of John Moore v. Regents of the University of California,” Indian Journal of Medical Ethics 7, no. 2 (June 2010): 82–89,Google Scholar McDaniels, Andrea K., “Henrietta Lacks’ Family Wants Compensation for Her Cells,” The Baltimore Sun, February 15, 2017.Google Scholar
18 Dougherty first observes that if the content of moral predicates, like permissibility, depends in some ways on our own attitudes, and if attitudes themselves can be vague (in the way that people can have vagueness-related partial beliefs about baldness), then the moral attitudes, like desire or approval, may be vague as well. Or it could be that the semantic rules for moral predicates do not specify whether and how they apply to particular situations, either because there are multiple possible linguistic conventions with different applications or because the ethical term depends on a vague descriptive term. Dougherty, Tom, “Vague Value,” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 89, no. 2 (2014): 352–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
19 On some metaethical views, people’s usage of moral terms determines the terms’ content. For example, just as on some views of jurisprudence, the conventional or expert understanding of a law, determines the facts about what a law actually says, according to some metaethicists, the conventional or hypothetical expert’s interpretation of what constitutes acceptable risk or permissible interference would determine what those terms meant. This view may be appealing for those who assert that the concept of ownership refers to ownership conventions, in which case making legal and socially acknowledged ownership conventions more precise would settle borderline questions about whether an act of seeming interference is a violation of a person’s ownership rights.
20 Schoenfeild argues that the semantics of a moral concept are either shifty or rigid. If the semantics are shifty, then whether the harm involved in the confiscation of skin cells or pollution is permissible or impermissible would shift, depending on whether it was uttered by a person who thinks that it is permissible to harm people in minor ways to achieve a substantial benefit or someone who rejects that claim. If the semantics were rigid, then it would mean that in cases of indeterminacy, the indeterminacy would not shift depending on the speaker. If so, then seeming cases of semantic indeterminacy would be best explained by underlying ontic indeterminacy. Schoenfield, Miriam, “Moral Vagueness Is Ontic Vagueness,” Ethics 126, no. 2 (2016): 257–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
21 Sobel, “Backing Away from Libertarian Self-Ownership,” 51.
22 Citing Judith Thomson and Bernard Williams, Dougherty and Schoenfield both press this point against epistemic accounts of moral vagueness.
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25 This is just one proposed meta-norm, but it has been defended extensively for cases of descriptive indeterminacy and uncertainty, and I suspect that these arguments would apply with equal cases to normative indeterminacy. For a defense of a meta-norm of caution, see Moller, Dan, “Abortion and Moral Risk,” Philosophy 86, no. 3 (2011): 425–43;CrossRefGoogle Scholar Guerrero, Alexander A., “Don’t Know, Don’t Kill: Moral Ignorance, Culpability, and Caution,” Philosophical Studies 136, no. 1 (2007): 59–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
26 Consider an analogy to legal indeterminacy. Jurisprudence is the study of meta-norms that one should adopt when faced with genuine indeterminacy in first-order legal principles. Despite this, the law still informs how people act. Similarly, there can be genuine indeterminacy in first-order moral principles, but those principles can still be action-guiding. David Plunkett and Scott Shapiro, “Law, Morality, and Everything Else: General Jurisprudence as a Branch of Metanormative Inquiry,” Ethics 128, no. 1 (2017): 37–68.
27 One concern about this response is that the meta-norm that people should adopt in response to unknowable moral predicates like “acceptably risky” could also be vague as applied to cases. So, for example, the norm that people should refrain from imposing risks when they are reasonably uncertain may be accused of appealing to an unknowable threshold between reasonable certainty and reasonably uncertainty. I’m not sure how to answer this regress problem. Perhaps vagueness of this sort is unavoidable.
28 Elizabeth Barnes, “Ontic Vagueness: A Guide for the Perplexed,” 609.
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38 Kagan, “Thinking about Cases.”
39 For a further defense of this and the next argument against reflective equilibrium, see McPherson, Tristram, “The Methodological Irrelevance of Reflective Equilibrium,” in The Palgrave Handbook of Philosophical Methods (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015), 652–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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41 Or as Kagan writes, “our moral intuition deserves considerably less respect than it is normally accorded. But it is difficult to believe that we could ever make do without it altogether. No moral argument—no claim, no theory—will ever seem compelling if it has not been subjected to the testing we provide when we think about cases.” Kagan, “Thinking about Cases.”
42 Godfrey-Smith, Peter, “Metaphysics and the Philosophical Imagination,” Philosophical Studies: An International Journal for Philosophy in the Analytic Tradition 160, no. 1 (2012): 97–113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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44 So too, logical theories are evaluated on the basis of explanatory coherence, power, and tractability and are not necessarily undermined by paradoxes. Trafford, James, Meaning in Dialogue: An Interactive Approach to Logic and Reasoning, Studies in Applied Philosophy, Epistemology, and Rational Ethics (Springer International Publishing, 2017), 197.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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49 Gertrude Elizabeth Margaret Anscombe, “War and Murder,” 1961.