Performance-enhancing drugs, sport, and the ideal of natural athletic performance
The use of certain performance-enhancing drugs (PED) is banned in sport. I discuss critically standard justifications of the ban based on arguments from two widely used criteria: fairness and harms to health. I argue that these arguments on their own are inadequate, and only make sense within a normative understanding of athletic performance and the value of sport. In the discourse over PED, the distinction between "natural" and "artificial" performance has exerted significant impact. I examine whether the distinction makes sense from a moral point of view. I propose an understanding of "natural" athletic performance by combining biological knowledge of training with an interpretation of the normative structure of sport. I conclude that this understanding can serve as moral justification of the PED ban and enable critical and analytically based line drawing between acceptable and nonacceptable performance-enhancing means in sport.
© Copyright 2018 The American Journal of Bioethics. All rights reserved.
| Subjects: | |
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| Notations: | biological and medical sciences |
| Published in: | The American Journal of Bioethics |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
2018
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| Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1080/15265161.2018.1459934 |
| Volume: | 18 |
| Issue: | 6 |
| Pages: | 8-15 |
| Document types: | article |
| Level: | advanced |