In this episode I talk (again) to Brian Earp. Brian is Associate Director of the Yale-Hastings Program in Ethics and Health Policy at Yale University and The Hastings Center, and a Research Fellow in the Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics at the University of Oxford. Brian has diverse research interests in ethics, psychology, and the philosophy of science. His research has been covered in Nature, Popular Science, The Chronicle of Higher Education, The Atlantic, New Scientist, and other major outlets. We talk about his latest book, co-authored with Julian Savulescu, on love drugs.



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Show Notes

0:00 - Introduction

2:17 - What is love? (Baby don't hurt me) What is a love drug?

7:30 - What are the biological underpinnings of love?

10:00 - How constraining is the biological foundation to love?

13:45 - So we're not natural born monogamists or polyamorists?

17:48 - Examples of actual love drugs

23:32 - MDMA in couples therapy

27:55 - The situational ethics of love drugs

33:25 - The non-specific nature of love drugs

39:00 - The basic case in favour of love drugs

40:48 - The ethics of anti-love drugs

44:00 - The ethics of conversion therapy

48:15 - Individuals vs systemic change

50:20 - Do love drugs undermine autonomy or authenticity?

54:20 - The Vice of In-Principlism

56:30 - The future of love drugs

 

Relevant Links

Brian's Academia.edu page (freely accessible papers)

Brian's Researchgate page (freely accessible papers)

Brian asking Sam Harris a question

The book: Love Drugs or Love is the Drug

'Love and enhancement technology'by Brian Earp

'The Vice of In-principlism and the Harmfulness of Love' by me



 

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