Reminder: public lecture by Professor Thomas H. Murray (President Emeritus of 
the Hastings Centre).



Topic: Why we play? Sports, Values and Drugs



When: Monday, 19 September, 5.30 pm for 6pm



Where: Tenison Woods House, ACU North Sydney Campus. Level 22, 8-20 Napier 
Street, North Sydney


Overview
The Rio Olympic Games were marked by disqualifications of many athletes for 
using performance-enhancing drugs. What makes the use of anabolic steroids, EPO 
and other forms of doping so persistent and pervasive? The dynamics of athletic 
competition set the stage for ethical analysis. Some commentators argue that 
the current system for deterring doping in sport is ineffective, misguided, or 
both. The standard defense of anti-doping offers two justifications: that it 
promotes fairness and protects athletes' health. Critics argue that fairness 
only requires that all competitors have access to the same 
performance-enhancing drugs, and that athletes' health would be better 
protected if doping were regulated under the care of physicians. Appreciating 
the realities of competitive sport undermines confidence in the concept of 
medically supervised doping. A careful examination of what gives sport its 
values and meaning provides a solid foundation for wanting to preserve a place 
for sport without performance-enhancing drugs.



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