Serendipity, Luck and Collective Responsibility in Medical Innovation—The History of Vaccination
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_C5B9049F7A5F
Type
A part of a book
Publication sub-type
Chapter: chapter ou part
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Serendipity, Luck and Collective Responsibility in Medical Innovation—The History of Vaccination
Title of the book
Serendipity Science
Publisher
Springer Nature
ISBN
9783031335280
9783031335297
9783031335297
Publication state
Published
Issued date
07/2023
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Language
english
Abstract
Martin Sand and Luca Chiapperino find in the concept of serendipity a versatile umbrella term to reassess their previous work on moral luck and collective responsibility. Moral luck supposedly occurs when someone receives praise or blame for things beyond control. Given the ubiquity of luck, this seems to be a seriously disquieting aspect of ordinary morality. The rewards and recognition for serendipitous discoveries fall into exactly this category. That is: more than the intentions, actions, and characters of scientists matters for discoveries to obtain, just as in cases of moral luck something beyond morality affects our moral judgments. Even if a theoretical way of resolving the conceptual ambiguities that underlie this debate were found, there remain practical questions of how to perform stratification in science and innovation in ways that both hinge on, and yet refrain from, considerations of desert and achievement. With the example of Edward Jenner’s luck- and serendipity-infused discovery of vaccination, the authors attempt to better understand the intricate value trade-offs that underlie stratification policies in science, which have to be constantly re-negotiated to maintain their legitimacy. Thereby, Sand and Ciapperino aim to take a bold step towards understanding the ethics of serendipity.
Publisher's website
Funding(s)
Swiss National Science Foundation / Careers / 185822
Create date
18/09/2023 14:21
Last modification date
19/09/2023 5:55