Niklas A. Döbler

Psychology, Human Enhancement & SETI

Human Enhancement Without Organizational Knowledge and by Organizational Order


Journal article


Niklas Alexander Döbler, Claus-Christian Carbon, Harald Schaub
Journal of Cognitive Enhancement, Springer, 2023, pp. 1--14


Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Döbler, N. A., Carbon, C.-C., & Schaub, H. (2023). Human Enhancement Without Organizational Knowledge and by Organizational Order. Journal of Cognitive Enhancement, 1–14. https://doi.org/10.1007/s41465-023-00278-7


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Döbler, Niklas Alexander, Claus-Christian Carbon, and Harald Schaub. “Human Enhancement Without Organizational Knowledge and by Organizational Order.” Journal of Cognitive Enhancement (2023): 1–14.


MLA   Click to copy
Döbler, Niklas Alexander, et al. “Human Enhancement Without Organizational Knowledge and by Organizational Order.” Journal of Cognitive Enhancement, Springer, 2023, pp. 1–14, doi:10.1007/s41465-023-00278-7.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{doebler2023a,
  title = {Human Enhancement Without Organizational Knowledge and by Organizational Order},
  year = {2023},
  journal = {Journal of Cognitive Enhancement},
  pages = {1--14},
  publisher = {Springer},
  doi = {10.1007/s41465-023-00278-7},
  author = {Döbler, Niklas Alexander and Carbon, Claus-Christian and Schaub, Harald}
}

Abstract

Organizations strive to ensure and maintain the reliability, safety, security, usability, and competitiveness of their processes, goods, and services. Improvement of employees’ skills and abilities contributes to these ends and is a relevant issue for the field of human factors. However, going a step further than designing ergonomics, implementing protocols, and conducting training is the attempt to enhance employee skills directly through various technological means. So-called Human Enhancement aims at direct technological interference with the employees’ skills and is a notoriously controversial yet deeply historical phenomenon. Drawing from empirical and theoretical literature on Human Enhancement, we seek to provide an initial analysis of this phenomenon in an organizational context. One motivational aspect of contemporary Human Enhancement is the need to meet internal, often self-related, or external, usually social or organizational, demands. Given the different effects and means of Human Enhancement, some forms are illicit, sanctioned, and/or condemned as morally wrong, while others are obligatory and well-established. Enhancement efforts can be based on individual initiative and, hence, without organizational knowledge. The opposite of the spectrum are enhancements applied by organizational order. We also emphasize how an organizational culture may incentivize engagement with illicit means of Human Enhancement. Potentially linked to safety and security-related aspects, its enhancement effects in relation to these two poles can inform stakeholders in their regulatory decisions.





Follow this website


You need to create an Owlstown account to follow this website.


Sign up

Already an Owlstown member?

Log in