The Medicalization of Love: Some Notes on the Perils of the Quick Tech Fix Anti-Love Bio/Enhancement Project
PDF (Español (España))

Keywords

/ (anti-)love biotechnology
medicalization
autonomy
sexism
human enhancement

How to Cite

Gavrell, S. (2021). The Medicalization of Love: Some Notes on the Perils of the Quick Tech Fix Anti-Love Bio/Enhancement Project. Diálogos, 52(109), 65–86. Retrieved from https://revistas.upr.edu/index.php/dialogos/article/view/19393

Abstract

Copying science fiction, it has been proposed that anti-love biotechnology should be used to solve ethical problems: being in love should be conceived as a kind of addiction that, when harmful, should be "cured". In this paper, I present and evaluate some aspects of the proposal to medicalize love. I show sexist assumptions in the conceptualization of problems and their solutions, and in medical practice; and argue that anti-love biotechnology will not solve the problems it aims to address. Using current examples of medicalized meaningful human experiences, I suggest the normalization of love-as-disease limits our imaginings of alternate futures: eventually it will be difficult to conceive of "being in love" as an experience free from medical control. The proposal to include "love-as-addiction" in the DSM-V also has the potential to undermine autonomy by laying the foundation to label as incompetent anyone in love and justify imposing treatment invoking medical paternalism.

PDF (Español (España))
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.