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Could Colorblindness Cure Be Morally Wrong?

destinyland writes "One in 12 men suffers from colorblindness, though '[t]he good news here is that these folks are simply missing a patch of DNA ... which is just the kind of challenge this Millennium is made for. Enter science.' But NPR's Moira Gunn (from Biotech Nation) now asks a provocative question. Is it wrong to cure colorblindness? She reports on an experiment that used a virus to introduce corrective DNA into colorblind monkeys. ('It took 20 weeks, but eventually the monkeys started distinguishing between red and green.') Then she asks, could it be viewed differently? 'Are we trying to 'normalize' humans to a threshold of experience?'"

746 of 981 comments (clear)

  1. WTF? Just ask the patient. by Colin+Smith · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Would you like to be cured?"

    Problem solved.
     

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    Deleted
    1. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by The+Dancing+Panda · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Or, if it makes her feel better to not call it a cure..."Would you like to see all the colors, like just about everyone else can?"

    2. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Thiez · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, the 'moral dilemma' is kinda silly. But why stop at curing colourblindness? When can I get my IR and UV vision?

      What's interesting is that some women can see 4 colours instead of the 3 (or less...) the rest of us are stuck with. So there is definitely evidence that the brain can handle more input than it's currently receiving.

    3. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      "Would you like to be cured?"

      Problem solved.

      Kind of like asking $sexual_preference people if they would like to be cured? Or perhaps asking $skin_colour people if they would like to be cured? Perhaps the "problem" is identifying colour blindness as a defect that needs a cure and trying to make all humans meet some baseline or be classified as defective.

    4. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by tpstigers · · Score: 1

      Try to look at the bigger picture. The question could just as easily be: "Would you like to be Harrison Bergeron?"

    5. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      As someone who is red green colorblind, if someone asked me, I'd say yes. It's in part prevented me from working in a number of fields I'd be interested in. I wanted to be a pilot as a kid. I later wanted to be an electrical engineer, but I have a hard time with resistor values that are color coded, so that was out. I have a hard time with Ethernet cable pairs, lights on switches and routers, so I have a difficult time with networking courses. You tell me you can "fix" my vision, count me in.

    6. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by pushing-robot · · Score: 5, Funny

      Ah, but where does it end?

      "Would you like ultra-wide spectrum super-HD eyes with 60x optical zoom, Internet-connected HUD and complimentary laser cannons, just like everyone else has?"

      --
      How can I believe you when you tell me what I don't want to hear?
    7. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by physicsphairy · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You are forgetting about all the accidents and injuries caused by people with colorblindness being less aware of warnings and other color-coded safety information. Society has to pick up the tab, and as such is within its rights to require every citizen to obtain full vision correction whether they like it or not!

      (Don't worry about the cost of the procedure; it will be covered by your government-mandated insurance purchase.)

    8. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Velox_SwiftFox · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Which makes the question: Why should the vast majority of women be colorblind when their condition could be corrected?

    9. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      "Would you like ultra-wide spectrum super-HD eyes with 60x optical zoom, Internet-connected HUD and complimentary laser cannons, just like everyone else has?"

      Hell yes.

    10. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by khallow · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Kind of like asking $sexual_preference people if they would like to be cured? Or perhaps asking $skin_colour people if they would like to be cured? Perhaps the "problem" is identifying colour blindness as a defect that needs a cure and trying to make all humans meet some baseline or be classified as defective.

      Asking someone if they want to do something is far, far different from making them do something. I get bombarded with advertisements all the time that tell me I have a problem: I'm too heavy, too light skinned, have teeth which aren't white enough, don't get enough exercise, have too many wrinkles, and have an inadequate penis and sex life. Do they then make me change my ways? No, they merely ask me to buy their products. I don't consider that immoral.

    11. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Funny

      No, I wouldn't. If everyone else has them, I want at least 120x optical zoom, ad-block on the HUD, and an automatic targeting program for the laser cannons.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    12. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by The+Warlock · · Score: 1

      Yes, please, where do I swipe my card?

      It's a brave new future we're heading into.

      --
      I've upped my standards, so up yours.
    13. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by nodd · · Score: 1, Funny

      As long as it's able to run Crysis, I'd love it!

    14. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by swillden · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Ah, but where does it end?

      "Would you like ultra-wide spectrum super-HD eyes with 60x optical zoom, Internet-connected HUD and complimentary laser cannons, just like everyone else has?"

      Hell, yeah!!

      That's even dumber than the first question.

      --
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    15. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by SEWilco · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Why should the vast majority of women not be green?

    16. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Kenoli · · Score: 2, Funny

      Sexual preference and skin color are not disabilities. They don't prevent anyone from doing anything.
      Someone with color blindness is physically incapable of doing something that a large majority of people can do.

      The colorblind are defective and must be repaired.

    17. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

      Kind of like asking $sexual_preference people if they would like to be cured? Or perhaps asking $skin_colour people if they would like to be cured? Perhaps the "problem" is identifying colour blindness as a defect that needs a cure and trying to make all humans meet some baseline or be classified as defective.

      No. It isn't. It's more like asking people with myopia if they would like to be cured. Neither $skin_color people nor $sexual_preference people have a body part that fails to function correctly. In the case of color-blind people, our eyes do not function correctly. Or do you think eyeglasses, contacts, or eye surgery are morally wrong as well?

    18. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Bugamn · · Score: 1

      Can I have fries with that?

    19. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by f3rret · · Score: 5, Interesting

      In all fairness it is a valid question to pose.

      Genetically altering humans is a fairly big ethical question. Granted curing color blindness is fairly harmless, but once we know how to do that and accept it can be done it pretty much stands to reason that we will find out how to do other things and will accept doing those.

      While curing color blindness and any number of genetic defects might in the long run be the best course of action, at least from a "continuation of the species"-viewpoint, at what point do we draw the line.
      I mean when we first begun to do surgery we did it to save life and for "the betterment of mankind", and now we are doing cosmetic surgery. In the case of cosmetic surgery the point can be made that people who have not had the surgery are at a disadvantage (Can't get certain jobs on ground of attractiveness, and so on), now when we start to do "cosmetic" DNA surgery we are tampering with humanity at a pretty basic level and run the risk of the species splitting off in to one (or several) different species, those who had have the genetic augmentations and those that have not.
      So once we are two different species what'll the augmented species think of the non-augmented one? Will the people who for whatever reason are not able to get or unwilling to get the augmentations done be considered as some kind of untermench or will the non-augmented line be terminated all together?

      I am not advocating that we should ban all genetic medicine, far from it, personally I would love to be cured of my colorblindness and I'm sure there are any number of people with various other genetic defects that would like to be cured.
      This also raises the question: how do we decide what constitutes a defect, and how to we go about determining if it should be cured? Also if we are set on removing genetic defects from the gene pool how to we deal with people who do not want the cure? Do we forbid them from breeding so they will not pass on their "defective" genes?

      Whatever is the case, it's a valid debate and one we'll WILL need to have before we do these sorts of things, even if they seem kind of harmless.

      --
      Admit nothing. Deny Everything. Make Counter-accusations.
    20. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by dennism · · Score: 3, Funny

      Ah, but where does it end?

      "Would you like ultra-wide spectrum super-HD eyes with 60x optical zoom, Internet-connected HUD and complimentary laser cannons, just like everyone else has?"

      Yes. Yes I do.

      --
      dennis
    21. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      Sexual preference and skin color are not disabilities. They don't prevent anyone from doing anything.

      Too-light skin color will be seen more and more as a disability if the ozone layer gets worse - if you're too light, you're toast.

      Better a "natural tan" than an unnatural melanoma.

    22. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      Well, the phrasing is possibly unfortunate, but I don't really see the problem. Ask a typical homosexual if they'd like a treatment that makes them heterosexual, and they'll say no, although a few will probably say yes. The same would probably be true in reverse.

      If a simple treatment could alter skin colour, I expect that there would be a lot of takers, just as there are a lot of customers for hair dye now. You'd probably end up with fashions in skin colour - maybe black would be in one year, white the next, and you'd really confuse all of the racists.

      My father is red-green colour blind, and I'm sure he'd jump at the chance to distinguish red and green. I'm not, although I do have slightly non-standard colour perception (I can distinguish more shades of blue and fewer shades of red than an average human, apparently). I wouldn't particularly want a 'cure' but if it were reversible then I wouldn't mind seeing what you all see for a bit.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    23. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Krneki · · Score: 5, Funny

      No, I wouldn't. If everyone else has them, I want at least 120x optical zoom, ad-block on the HUD, and an automatic targeting program for the laser cannons.

      Add the ability to convert Americans fat chicks into Sweden porn stars and you got yourself a deal.

      --
      Love many, trust a few, do harm to none.
    24. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      totally. i love npr, but moira gunn is a little bit of an idiot especially as a "tech reporter". if you take some time to listen to her opinion pieces they are usually either not very well thought out or extremely conservative (and skeptical of disruptive technologies). i've taken to just changing the channel whenever she's on...

    25. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by GameMaster · · Score: 2, Funny

      Your ideas intrigue me and I would like to sign up for your newsletter.

      --

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      #1 - The DM is always right.
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    26. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by NicknamesAreStupid · · Score: 1

      I'd rather be smoked than cured.

    27. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Twinbee · · Score: 1

      I have a feeling that the idea is that over generations, the normalizing could be restricting the full range of vision if we try to 'fix' it. Short term gain, potentially long-term loss. It could be argued that 'natural selection' should take its course instead. Of course, no one could say for sure.

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    28. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by biryokumaru · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I beg to differ. Color-sighted people are physically incapable of doing something that colorblind people can do.

      --
      When you're afraid to download music illegally in your own home, then the terrorists have won!
    29. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by ingsocsoc · · Score: 1

      Yes please!

    30. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by rolfwind · · Score: 1

      Ah, but where does it end?

      "Would you like ultra-wide spectrum super-HD eyes with 60x optical zoom, Internet-connected HUD and complimentary laser cannons, just like everyone else has?"

      It ends when I say "No, thanks".

      I could get LASIK now, but for various nonfinancial reasons I opt not too, I fail to see the significant difference with your example.

    31. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Hairy1 · · Score: 1

      Yes Please. Where do I sign up?

      Not laser cannons though - can I swap for super sensitive ears?

    32. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by biryokumaru · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm an electrical engineer, and I can tell you that anyone who says you can't be one because you can't read resistors is a complete idiot. I am deeply saddened that you could not pursue that interest because of that extremely minor issue.

      --
      When you're afraid to download music illegally in your own home, then the terrorists have won!
    33. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by ChunderDownunder · · Score: 1
    34. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by thms · · Score: 1

      Yes, it is not that this could dissolve (or "destroy") and entire communities, such as blind peoples braille alphabet or deaf peoples sign language. There was actually a case where parents wanted their child to be deaf as well. Cochlear implants are seen quite critical by some. I'm not sure where to stand on this issue. Maybe communities which enhance themselves collectively will replace those.


      As to tetrachomats and their obvious evolutionary advantages, there is the corresponding hypothesis that being colorblind makes it easier for you to spot certain shapes.

    35. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      I'm as optimistic as the next guy that safe and affordable HD 60x optical zoom laser cannon eyeball technology is only a couple years away, but Crysis? Be reasonable with your expectations.

    36. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Robin47 · · Score: 3, Informative
      I think we might be missing the point. I read it as "Maybe we shouldn't have the cure available because it would be morally wrong." That strikes me as a lot more ominous.

      I'm deaf and they are researching a similar cure for my condition. I can't wait to hear again. But what if they decided it would be wrong to change me from the way my genetic makeup made me? Or maybe the people in a third world country shouldn't be helped to advance because they would loose their heritage? In each case, the people should have the right to decide their fate. Just my opinion but interesting question.

    37. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Jarik+C-Bol · · Score: 1

      huh. thats interesting. apparently you win.

      --
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    38. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by sonicmerlin · · Score: 1

      Really??? I imagine there are a huge number of gay people who would be very, very happy to at the very least experiment with a "cure" for their "affliction", if only because of enormous societal pressure for them to normalize their preferences. Certainly a huge swath of the secretly gay conservative party would do anything for such a treatment.

    39. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Twinbee · · Score: 5, Funny

      I am an interested customer.

      Tell me, do the laser cannons automatically come with the packaged shark/s? I have had problems assembling parts in these kind of situations before, so it would also be nice to know if the shark comes pre-attached to the laser, or if any soldering is required.

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    40. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by sonicmerlin · · Score: 1

      In other words... AVATAR! Woohoo!

    41. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Twinbee · · Score: 1

      Awesome, then we can all look like borg.

      Borg for one, and one for borg.

      Hell, yeah!

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    42. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by sonicmerlin · · Score: 1

      Your point about 3rd-world people losing their heritage is very meaningful to me, as it's something I've thought about quite a bit. I feel like there must be a way to improve certain obvious aspects of society for third-worlders without drastically changing the way they live. It's just that in our current *rush for the next big thing* mentality we don't stop to give such consideration.

    43. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > "Would you like ultra-wide spectrum super-HD eyes with 60x optical
      > zoom, Internet-connected HUD and complimentary laser cannons

      Depends. What's all this going to cost me?

      Oh, wait, let me guess: an arm and a leg, right? No thanks, then.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    44. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by icebraining · · Score: 1

      People with dark skin have more tendency to have vitamin D deficiency.

      Both problems (vit.D deficiency and skin cancer risk) can be easily prevented without actually changing the skin color.

    45. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by GaryOlson · · Score: 1

      I use my red-color blindness with women the same way -- I don't care what color your lipstick or rouge is. I only notice when they speak intelligently.

      --
      Every mans' island needs an ocean; choose your ocean carefully.
    46. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > I want at least 120x optical zoom, ad-block on the HUD,
      > and an automatic targeting program for the laser cannons.

      I'd ask for a trillion billion dollars, my own space shuttle, and a private continent.

      (Actually, I'm really the kind of guy who'd be more likely to wish for a sandwich like Hobbes. But I think Calvin's line is funnier.)

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    47. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Anonymusing · · Score: 5, Funny

      Add the ability to convert Americans fat chicks into Sweden porn stars and you got yourself a deal.

      People have been using beer to achieve that effect for a long time.

      --
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    48. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by The+Mighty+Buzzard · · Score: 1

      You don't get to keep the laser cannons with LASIK, duh.

      --
      Violence is like duct tape. If it doesn't solve the problem, you didn't use enough.
    49. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Rakshasa+Taisab · · Score: 1

      The morally right/wrong question is bullshit spewed by those who think the human body is somehow sacred.

      Yet there is an argument against going _TOO_ far down this path, e.g. doing more than fixing the worst of genetic diseases, and that is the danger of homogenization of the human population. We want variety to ensure our survival.

      --
      - These characters were randomly selected.
    50. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by kurokame · · Score: 1

      We can cure colorblindness genetically because we know what the "normal" gene for that region looks like. We don't have similar information about IR or UV vision.

      Besides which, your eyes would probably need to be a different size to work very far outside the visual spectrum. It's not genetics, it's physics. But I can get you a good deal on cybernetic replacement eyes if you still want that IR/UV vision.

    51. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

      Theres an iPhone app for that which could read resistor colors.

      But these days, SMT is so small, theyre no colors at all, just a 10x zoom lens :)

      --
      Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
    52. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by sourcerror · · Score: 1

      now when we start to do "cosmetic" DNA surgery we are tampering with humanity at a pretty basic level and run the risk of the species splitting off in to one (or several) different species, those who had have the genetic augmentations and those that have not.

      We don't kill sterile couples, nor gays, do we?

    53. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      I was going to say that's old news - colour blind people were recruited as spotters in the second world war because they could camouflage was designed to work against normal colour perception - then I saw the date on the article was 1940...

      Note, however, that it isn't their inability to distinguish red and green that makes this, it's their increased contrast perception (which is why 'colour blindness' is something of a misnomer). It's possible that this would be retained after the treatment, and then the rest of us would be asking for a treatment that increased our contrast perception...

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    54. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      I expect color blind people may have a different ratio of rods to cones which would help night vision.

      Why would you expect that? Do you even know how red-green colorblindness works?

    55. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      As to tetrachomats and their obvious evolutionary advantages, there is the corresponding hypothesis that being colorblind makes it easier for you to spot certain shapes.

      I remember hearing and/or reading that colorblind men were used in scout planes during the mid-20th century because they tended to not be fooled by camouflage. It may have been because of the different green sensitivity, or because people who are colorblind tend to do more shape-based recognition.

    56. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Arancaytar · · Score: 1

      I totally would!

      I want fricking lasers attached to my fricking head!

      (Signed,
      a shark)

    57. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by aussie_a · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Here's a question: Is it morally wrong to beat your kids ears (careful not to do any brain damage in the process) so they become deaf? Then why is it okay to deny them treatment that will cure them of deafness?

      Of course, no-one wants the government forcing people to place cochlear implants into their children's ears. But as a society we can encourage parents to do it. Just as we encourage parents not to raise their kids as raging-racists.

    58. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      Awesome. I know I had heard/read about this (as I posted above), but now I have a source. Thank you much.

    59. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by natehoy · · Score: 1

      I fail to see any difference between this and the eyeglasses I wear to make my vision "normal", and the laser correction surgery I want to have someday.

      Would I have enjoyed continuing my experience with life from the 4th grade having to rush up to the blackboard to read the homework assignment before the teacher erased it because I couldn't see it from my desk in the front row? FUCK NO!

      I'm not colorblind, but if I was I'd almost certainly want this.

      It's like telling someone they can't have access to vision because we're afraid it would somehow mess up their experience as a blind person. I've heard the same argument about the deaf. You know what? If a patient doesn't want it, they should never, EVER be forced into it. But if they do, then get the hell out of their way with this "preserving their identity" stuff and let them try it.

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
    60. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Count+Fenring · · Score: 1

      Well, your expectations are incorrect, and based on a lack of understanding of any of the science involved.

      Also, you seem to have forgotten that people drive at night.

    61. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by nacturation · · Score: 1

      To get the 120x optical zoom, you are required to legally change your name to Carl Zeiss.

      --
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    62. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Animaether · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I went to an EE prep school and had to tell one of my classmates - after he asked me if a stripe on a resistor was orange or red - that if he had difficulty discerning the two colors, he should check with the school council on this matter. They did indeed offer a variety of different courses to him simply because - by law - he would not be allowed to work with a large variety of systems based on e.g. old color coding of wiring (red and green for live and neutral) in houses.

      He *could* still pursue the course he was taking, but they did warn him that in either direction (installation tech - not just the 220V AC systems but also the very common 24V and 12V DC systems used in control panels - or electronics), he would face many issues ranging from inconveniences to basically a note on his certification that would preclude him from working on various electrical systems.

      On an up note - he went into mechanical engineering instead and last I bumped into him he was designing parts for water turbines/scoops that raise water from a lower water level to a higher water level without harming - and in some ways in fact helping - fish migrations.

      However, he still decided to give up his first passion. Maybe he would have gone on to do great things in that field just as well.. so if his colorblindness could have been 'cured' in the term mentioned in the story summary (20 weeks), then he could have simply applied for a hiatus on medical grounds and return the next year (or try and fast-track from the next semester) without re-enrollment procedures/etc.

    63. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by natehoy · · Score: 1

      How much and how long's the line ahead of me?

      No thanks on the cannon, don't need 'em and don't need to carry around that kind of battery. For the rest, can I get the GPS option? Thanks.

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
    64. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Darinbob · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The moral dilemma is because of the implicit assumption that color-blindness is a fault that should be cured. It's just a societal notion that this is a flaw to be corrected; what if we figured out that there was a way to correct all those faulty brown eyes so that they were perfectly blue instead? Or let's say we could "fix" left handed people to be right handed? In other words, we're assuming a template for human beings the defines what is "correct".

      Similarly, there are segments of the deaf population who do not feel that being deaf is a flaw that needs fixing. If you ask "wouldn't you like to be able to hear stuff?" many will respond negatively, possibly suggesting that the better fix would be to alter other people's prejudices. To them the questions is as rude as asking "wouldn't you like to have blue eyes instead?"

      Color-blindness is not blindness, one can still see and distinguish colors. They're just distinguished in a different way from the general populace. Of course they can figure out traffic lights - red is on top, green is on the bottom. There is no handicap or disability here. If there's a problem in some configuration of lights or shades, then perhaps the fault lies with design that excluded a significant fraction of the populace. Imagine if someone designed a keyboard/mouse combination where the mouse was fixed to the right side of the keyboard; the left handers would legitimately claim that it was badly designed.

    65. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      Too-light skin color will be seen more and more as a disability if the ozone layer gets worse - if you're too light, you're toast.

      When that day comes we as a society can then judge the pros and cons of such treatment. That day has yet to come. On the other hand, colour-blind people do exist now and there is treatment for them if they wish it.

      I have glasses. I choose to wear glasses over laser eye surgery. Partly because:
      * I remember when there was fear of laser-eye surgery damaging people's eyes more than it helps. Even if you are a perfect candidate for the surgery, the risk for damage still exists. That said, I recognise that my fears of these risks are probably disproportionate to the actual likelihood of any of the negative possibilities actually happening.
      * It doesn't guarantee I won't need glasses.
      * There is also also no guarantee my vision will be permanently corrected.
      * Its pretty expensive.

      Given the above, I choose not to go for laser-eye surgery. Wearing glasses also doesn't bother me enough to want to spend the money and undertake the above risks.

      That said, if there was a serious risk of me going blind I would immediately undertake the surgery.

    66. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The comparison to cosmetic surgery is apt, I think. The question is whether humanity, in its western industrial variety, has forsaken actual genetic success for the appearance of successful genes. Cosmetic surgery allows people who should be less successful reproductively to fake their way in. Are we going down the same road when it comes to "curing" essentially cosmetic genetic problems?

      More importantly, if we permanently alter the genetic makeup of these individuals, are we irrevocably sacrificing our species' genetic resilience in favor of quick answers to avoiding the inherent differences we all posess? Who's to say that color-blindness is counter-successful genetically? Until we understand the repurcussions of genetically "curing" people who have marginal differences from the norm, maybe we should hold off on screwing around with the instruction code for life. When you have a truly debilitating illness, sure. But for something as petty as color-blindness, let's take a step back and maybe see what happens when we screw around in the truly necessary cases before adopting the nuclear cure for firecracker issues.

    67. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by RsG · · Score: 1

      "Would you like to be cured?"

      Problem solved.

      Kind of like asking $sexual_preference people if they would like to be cured? Or perhaps asking $skin_colour people if they would like to be cured? Perhaps the "problem" is identifying colour blindness as a defect that needs a cure and trying to make all humans meet some baseline or be classified as defective.

      *Sigh*

      Apart from falling into the much abused "slippery slope" argument there, you're also completely failing to realize that one of your two examples is already a reality.

      We can change skin colour. It's not even that difficult. See: Micheal Jackson (not the best example, as he's dead, but the best known). Granted, it's also not cheap or immediate, unlike hair dye, but it's not science fiction either. If a $skin_colour individual wanted to be $other_skin_colour, they could.

      Why doesn't this happen often? Because almost nobody wants a change that drastic. You do get all manner of commercial products intended to lighten or darken skin temporarily (bleaching or tanning creams), but few folk want to be some colour other than that of their families, birth or what have you - usually people persecuted to the point of self-loathing.

      And let's take your other example. Lets say we could change sexual orientation. 99%+ of the population wouldn't be in the slightest bit interested, even if it were free and reversible. The 1% exception would be, again, motivated by self-loathing (think heavily closeted Fundies who view being gay as a curse).

      Most people want the identities they've got.

      The only way - and I mean the only way - such treatments become morally questionable, is when they aren't voluntary. The ability to change skin colour is a non issue, while forcing someone to undergo such a procedure violates all manner of medical ethics.

      So, no, your examples undermine your point. Want a fair way to determine who gets the treatment? Ask. Offer, but do not force. And anyone who wants to be colourblind will be perfectly fine. Most people who are colourblind would probably view this treatment in the exact same light as people with myopia (like me) view laser eye surgery - as a simple, uncomplicated fix. A moral non-issue if I ever saw one.

      --
      Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
    68. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by WillDraven · · Score: 1

      Just in case you hadn't gotten the point yet, I as well would like this.

      --
      This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is mine.
    69. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by mysidia · · Score: 1

      And i'll just want a debugger on mine, the ability to load user customized firmware, compilers, and a full development environment with remote link capabilities, that way I can load code on mine to wirelessly hack into other people's to control and see what they see, and take over control of their laser canons at will.

    70. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      IR and UV are hardly outside the visible spectrum, if you're talking about the fringes.

    71. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by natehoy · · Score: 1

      I already wear a Blackberry and a Leatherman on my belt, and a camera when I think I'll need to take decent pictures. I already require powerful glasses in order to function. I already wear a wristwatch. How bad could a Borg implant be? In a few years, it'll be normal and we'll be laughing at the meatspace troglodytes who refuse an upgrade.

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
    72. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      Good thing anyone can do that with a computer, whereas colorblind people still can't see all the colors even with a device.

    73. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by ardent99 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It seems most people are assuming that giving someone a perceptual capability that everyone else has would cause them to react to it the same way that everyone else does. But what if not? What if someone who lacks an ability to perceive something also has not developed a way of incorporating that sense into their thought processes, and if it is introduced later it causes them pain, confusion, or dysphoria?

      For example, imagine someone whose eyes are very insensitive to light, and sees everything very dimly. They grow up with that perceptual weakness being normal for them. If their eyesight were suddenly "fixed" to normal sensitivity, they might experience unbearable brightness, to the point of pain, similar to a normal person looking into the sun. Imagine someone who grew up deaf to high-pitched sounds suddenly hearing them; maybe they would suddenly experience a cacophony of noise around them in everyday life that is so annoying and distracting that they have a hard time coping? So similarly, if someone who grew up colorblind is suddenly able to see a new color, but their brain has not developed to handle it, might they not be able to cope with the new stimulation in a normal way?

    74. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      We are all going to be borg one day anyway. If I could get rid of my eyes and get a set that do not need contacts I would do it now. Or if the Lasik folks would offer a 100% guarantee I would do that. I will not spend the money and still be stuck in contacts or glasses.

    75. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by natehoy · · Score: 1

      Agreed with a small caveat.

      The colorblind are defective and must offered the opportunity to be repaired.

      If someone chooses to live with what you and I might consider a defect, that is their decision to make. Not ours.

      --
      "This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
    76. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      I think the point was that they couldn't get into the field initially because they couldn't build circuits easily themselves. I have no doubt that using CAD to produce a design requires no resistor-reading, but the way the subject matter is taught does.

    77. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      I disagree with your position but I'm disheartened to see you modded a troll for it.

    78. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by pla · · Score: 1

      Kind of like asking $sexual_preference people if they would like to be cured?

      Um, no.

      I can assure you, as a mostly-colorblind person, that it has no resemblance whatsoever to those other issues.

      I have a defect. One that, while it doesn't cause me all that many problems (and even gives a cute excuse for why I suck at fashion, when the real answer consists of nothing more than "Don't give a damn"), I would certainly "fix" in a heartbeat.

      And for those of you asking how far we "should" go with this - Yes, I'll also take the UV/IR vision, the cat-like reflexes, and the prehensile tail in a heartbeat as well. But to make you feel better, I couldn't care less about the blonde hair, blue eyes, and "healthy" pallor.

      I consider it the height of obscenity that the FDA officially considers "normalcy" not a condition to remedy. Fuck normalcy, give me my wings!

    79. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by w0mprat · · Score: 1

      But what about the second generation who did not ask to have their genes altered!! WHY WON'T SOMEONE PLEASE THINK OF THE CHILDREN!?

      They would demand to be given gene therapy to get the colorblindness back!

      --
      After logging in slashdot still does not take you back to the page you were on. It's been that way for 20 years.
    80. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by mysidia · · Score: 1

      Ah... great... next we'll have tastes:

      e.g. I don't like the taste of government-issue daily nutritional staple #5623A5 (under the new upcoming nationalized grocery system), it tastes flavorless to me.

      That's no problem... would you like staple food item #5623A5 to taste delicious to you just like it does to everyone else, instead of flavorless?

      No problem, we'll alter your genes (blah blah)..bing.. done..

      [Now, go enjoy your algae-coated seaweed].. Next?

      My hair is a different color than everyone else's can you fix it? Hair died! done... next?

      Hi.... my family is descended from a different culture, our faces, skin, and voice look different from everyone elses', can you fix?

      Ding... done! You look just like everyone else now...

      etc...etc

      Not that this is inherently immoral or anything.... it's just interesting. People shouldn't all want to be the same, and they don't, it's really implausible, I think.

      Color blindness, however, impairs actual function. It's a handicap, and a disadvantage in terms of physical abilities, that can have many negative effects over one's life.

      I've yet to hear of anyone being happy with being color blind, or having some actual advantage.

    81. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      I call shenanigans. Humans don't have the gear for that. Other species do, but it's no simple mutation - the whole system is adapted to work with the extra sensitivity.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    82. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by h4rr4r · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Are you really this dumb?

      Not seeing a color is a defect, they lack something. Having Brown eyes is a feature. Do you really not grasp the difference?
      This is a handicap, they cannot for instance become electricians. Nor can they figure out resistor color codes. The design is fine, these folks are as defective as they would be if they were missing a limb.

      Those deaf folks are just as dumb. This would be like me deciding not to wear contacts/glasses.

    83. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by davester666 · · Score: 1

      But I just wanted to look tan. You made me look like I'm black.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    84. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      No, one is a feature one is a defect. They lack an ability that they could gain. Are you really unable to grasp the difference?

    85. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by AaronW · · Score: 1

      This reminds me of when I had a new furnace installed. One of the installers doing the wiring for the thermostat was colorblind and was having a very difficult time of it until I offered to do it. I can only imagine how difficult it would be in electronics when so much can depend on color. Though today most PCBs are surface mount and through-hole resistors are less and less common, but there's still plenty of places where color is used.

      --
      This post is encrypted twice with ROT-13. Documenting or attempting to crack this encryption is illegal.
    86. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by IckySplat · · Score: 1

      yes, but when everything becomes little more than a fashion choice, the only real loss will be that there will be little or no point in being prejudiced one way or the other.

      Other than having poor fashion sense!
      So were still screwed ;)

      --
      Help! help!, the termites are eating my DRAM!!!
    87. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Kenoli · · Score: 1

      Nice seventy year old stub.

      Even if colorblind people can see the shit out of (certain types of?) camouflage it hardly negates the innumerable other things that they cannot see.

    88. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Dr+Damage+I · · Score: 4, Insightful

      When I applied (unsuccessfully on physical fitness grounds) to join the Australian Armed forces, a colorblindness test determined that I was colorblind. When I asked what the consequences of that would be I was informed that I would be excluded from being employed in certain areas (electronics was the only one specifically mentioned). As this was one of my particular interests, I questioned their "diagnosis" and was subjected to a lamp test instead which showed that I was not colorblind.

      The point is, colorblindness is not a value neutral difference, it is a real handicap with real consequences for real people who might prefer not to have their options limited by a birth condition. Are you really saying that 1. Colorblind (or deaf) people should not be offered the opportunity to have their condition corrected and that 2. It is the people who want to offer them that option, not the people who want to withhold it, who are behaving unethically?

      --
      "Cursed is he who rises early in the morning..." Isiah 5:11
    89. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Dr+Damage+I · · Score: 1

      And if the person with a vitamin D deficiency or higher skin cancer risk actually wants to change that? How much more important is diversity than peoples ability to choose these things for themselves?

      --
      "Cursed is he who rises early in the morning..." Isiah 5:11
    90. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by AdamHaun · · Score: 1

      Sexual preference and skin color are not disabilities. They don't prevent anyone from doing anything.

      Sexual preference can certainly prevent you from leading a normal life in most of the world. In the United States alone it can prevent you from getting married, cost you your job, and put you at risk of a violent attack. There are special clinics that will try to change your orientation if you (or your parents) choose, often resulting in mental trauma. Many people believe that being gay is not just a disability but a willful act of immorality and will fight tooth and nail to uphold that view. Sexual orientation is absolutely a relevant example of how this sort of technology might someday be put to troubling uses.

      Someone with color blindness is physically incapable of doing something that a large majority of people can do.

      Which in many cases does not affect their life at all. I have a coworker who didn't notice he was red/green color blind until he was in his 30s.

      --
      Visit the
    91. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 1

      I don't merely want to "cure" people. I want to advance people. Give us infravision.

      --
      You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
    92. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by tuxgeek · · Score: 1

      In answer to your Q
      NO

      I'm color blind to reds & greens
      There are draw backs to being color blind such as not fully appreciating rainbows or sunsets. I see those colors, just not as you do.
      That said, I see much more than most of you. I enjoy wildlife viewing & I see everything! Animals colored to blend into their habitat, doesn't work on me.
      Hunters in camo trying to blend into their surroundings, I see you fuckers, plain as day.

      During WWII, the infantry used color blind soldiers to lead as they could see the snipers lurking in trees that others could not.
      Color blindness is not a handy cap. It's a gift.

      --
      "Suppose you were an idiot...and suppose you were a member of Congress...but I repeat myself." Mark Twain
    93. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by mysidia · · Score: 1

      Sample size of 1.

      All the anecdote really proves is some color blind people are better at certain activities than some non color-blind people.

      However, the non-colorblind people could probably use eyepieces with enhancement to remove color channels from their view.

      And in most cases (other than that very special problem of detecting things adequately hidden only from color-sighted people), color blindness would be a major disadvantage

    94. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by moniker127 · · Score: 1

      I'd put it more like "Would you like to see colors?". Who says one method of seeing is something to be cured. Color blind men are just descendants of more predatory strains, that didn't need to see colors, because they hunted, they didn't gather fruit, they let the women do that.

    95. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by __aasqbs9791 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Why should it ever end? Does progress have a single predefined 'end point'?

    96. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      Lasik? I've given it some rather serious thought. The problem is, some percentage of people have reported that they have problems with night driving afterwards. They get dazzling effects from oncoming headlights. That was the single thing that decided me against lasik. I have to be able to go at night. If I can't get up and go when necessary, I may no longer have a job.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    97. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by CharlyFoxtrot · · Score: 2, Funny

      "Would you like to be cured?"

      Problem solved.

      If take this red pill you will be able to distinguishing between red and green. If you take this blue pill you will see colors no one has ever seen before. Far out man.

      --
      If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error.
    98. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      some women can see 4 colours instead of the 3

      To the best of my knowledge, they've never proved this in lab tests. While some women do have 2 diff types of green cones (or was it red?), so far there's no evidence those 2 kinds cover detectably-different wavelengths.

    99. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Slotty · · Score: 1
      It alludes to the issue of saying that your genetic make up is not good enough. I believe it was a popular concept in the late 20's early 30's called Eugenics a man named Hitler put it into practise. As pushing-robot (1037830) wrote:

      but where does it end?

      Lets hope not in a world where you have to have to meet a minimum standard

    100. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by mysidia · · Score: 1

      I'm not color blind, and in an engineering field. I can't read resistor values either, by the way.

      That's why you put resistors in labelled boxes, and test them when using anyways.

      As for network cable pairs, there are only 2 or 3 duties that require being able to distinguish the colors to do.....

      A lot of people work in networking without ever needing to make a cable, punch something down, or actually examine the physical layer.

      You could concentrate on protocol analysis instead.

      There are no 'colors' to distinguish in the TCP IP protocol.

      Or in a router config file. As long as someone else is the person physically looking at the router, they can tell you what color the lights are, probably.

    101. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Paradoks · · Score: 1

      Kind of like asking $sexual_preference people if they would like to be cured? Or perhaps asking $skin_colour people if they would like to be cured?

      How about asking if intersex people want to be cured? In that case, a large amount of intersex people already have that moral decision made for them, because certain parts of society can't imagine someone wanting to not be physically entirely male or female. So, perhaps, rather than talking about "deaf culture" and "colorblind culture", we could talk about "intersex culture", and ask a group of people who already have the choice, or had the choice taken from them.

      "problem" is identifying colour blindness as a defect that needs a cure

      I'd like four functional arms, the ability to see in infrared and ultraviolet, and to correct some of God's design flaws(e.g., I'd like a back that's designed for standing.). Is that normal? Probably not, but why should someone else get to make the choice for me, if it were possible? Why should some group's interests mean I won't be allowed to switch my skin color or sexual orientation?

      meet some baseline or be classified as defective.

      I do agree that life would be a lot easier if society accepted different people more than it does.

    102. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Marsala · · Score: 1

      Are there Linux drivers?

    103. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by flyneye · · Score: 1

      That's just too simple. Without deep probing questions into morality, no one would listen to wanna-be media clowns on NPR. That would only leave them to work in health food stores, reception jobs at the DNC or teaching community college courses. There is no retirement program for aging hippies or socially conscious, politically correct offspring of hippies. No National Alliance for the Advancement of Socialist People will come to their rescue. So be careful what you say. There are deep moral issues in society and our hippie overlords at NPR are here to guide us.

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    104. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by smaddox · · Score: 1

      Genetically altering humans is a fairly big ethical question.

      People keep saying that, but is it? An ethical question would be: "Is it okay to steel from the rich and corrupt and give to the poor?". I fail how to see improving people and people's lives presents an ethical question.

    105. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by maxume · · Score: 1

      You probably aren't using 'night vision' when you are driving at night.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    106. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by hedwards · · Score: 1

      But, color blindness is something you're born with. The only way that one could reasonably be asked if they want to be cured would involve time travel. Otherwise there could be serious consequences to doing that to a person. It causes enough trouble revealing to somebody that a deeply held belief is in fact demonstrably false. Imagine what it would be like having things suddenly appear very different than they were previously.

      Color blindness ultimately has a much larger impact than on what people expect it to have. Curing it could very easily have unintended consequences that aren't so easy to handle.

    107. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Robin47 · · Score: 1

      Your point about 3rd-world people losing their heritage is very meaningful to me, as it's something I've thought about quite a bit. I feel like there must be a way to improve certain obvious aspects of society for third-worlders without drastically changing the way they live. It's just that in our current *rush for the next big thing* mentality we don't stop to give such consideration.

      I think the point was that they should be the ones to make the choices of maybe they want electrification or better roads or whatever and give them the choices of how they want to change themselves as far as their culture, what to keep and what to leave. We do them a disservice if we tell them "no, you can't have this technology because you will loose your specialness" whatever that might mean to us. It's their choice.

      Now that I think of it, What if the cure for my deafness were imposed on me? That thought gives me pause.

    108. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by gman003 · · Score: 1

      Your argument fails based on one premise: that color-blindness is not a handicap. Changing someone's eyes from brown to blue offers them no advantage. Giving them better ability to distinguish color does. Would you refuse glasses if your vision was 20/60? Hopefully not. Would you refuse prosthetics if you lost your legs?

      Regardless of how well-designed interfaces should be (and often aren't), there will always be some things that rely on color. Art is probably hard to appreciate fully. Can they get by without seeing full color? Probably. Would they prefer seeing like the majority of the species? Probably.

      I don't favor forcing people to take the treatment. I also don't favor forcing them not to get it.

    109. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by dangitman · · Score: 1

      "Would you like ultra-wide spectrum super-HD eyes with 60x optical zoom, Internet-connected HUD and complimentary laser cannons, just like everyone else has?"

      What they don't tell you is that this particular operation causes your penis to fall off.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    110. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Gerzel · · Score: 2, Funny

      Mine's broken! All I'm getting is Romanian Gymnasts.

    111. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      is prk better about that?

    112. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by hedwards · · Score: 1

      We're assuming that it's relatively harmless. Personally I've got eyes that are extremely sensitive to light to the point of being functionally blind in bright light. I've learned to adapt and do a number of things in a similar fashion to the way that the blind do them. At this point, I'm dependent upon doing them in that way, "curing" me of that would have a serious impact on many areas of my life.

      The brain has a tendency to adapt and to overcome deficiencies, in my case I've managed to gain a couple extra senses that people don't seem to normally have as a way of compensating. I haven't met anybody else that has my level of natural talent for echolocation or seeing in extreme low light situations. Curing a person of my "problem" could very easily cure them of the upsides as well. It's really not something that humans should have any say in unless it's genuinely a very serious problem. Minor things like color blindness need to be considered very carefully in terms of unforeseen consequences.

    113. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by calmofthestorm · · Score: 1

      I'll take the incinerate and telekinesis plasmids, please.

      --
      93rd rule of Slashdot: No matter how obvious my sarcasm is, my comment will be taken seriously by someone.
    114. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by CptNerd · · Score: 2

      You could be pickled.

      --
      By the taping of my glasses, something geeky this way passes
    115. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by maxume · · Score: 1

      It's most like asking Hitler if he wants to be evil.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    116. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by tuxgeek · · Score: 1

      What's interesting is that some women can see 4 colours instead of the 3 (or less...) the rest of us are stuck with.

      Sure they can. Women are carriers of the color blind gene. They are immune. Some even have bionic hearing without the implants. My spouse can hear a fly fart in the neighbor's house. She hates going out to dinner in a public restaurant as she hears every conversation going on in the room, even when she doesn't want to ... TMI

      there is definitely evidence that the female brain can handle more input than it's currently receiving.

      This excludes you, unless you're a woman in disguise as a /. nerd, and then it's okay. As I've said before, women are much smarter than they let you believe.

      --
      "Suppose you were an idiot...and suppose you were a member of Congress...but I repeat myself." Mark Twain
    117. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Zephyr14z · · Score: 1

      Yes.

    118. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by genner · · Score: 1

      Ah, but where does it end?

      "Would you like ultra-wide spectrum super-HD eyes with 60x optical zoom, Internet-connected HUD and complimentary laser cannons, just like everyone else has?"

      We both know the laser cannons aren't really complimentary. They're just worked into the price.
      Will my Obamacare cover it?

    119. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by aflag · · Score: 1

      just ask a different question "would you like to see all the colors? Would you like to be white, black or yellow? Do you want to find women or men sexually attractive?" it's just really adding options to what a person can do.

    120. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      yeah, yeah. i can say the same thing even for artifcial limbs too. should we be helping any disabled person? of course, the point of our collective existence is changing nature.

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    121. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by CheeseTroll · · Score: 1

      Posted from my Facebook for Borg Implant.

      --
      A post a day keeps productivity at bay.
    122. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by tomhudson · · Score: 1
      Actually, you're pretty much guaranteed to need glasses at some point in your life anyway - normally, the eye gets more far-sighted as people age, so when you get older you'll be stuck with both reading glasses AND far-away glasses. It's simply not worth it in the long run. If you're near-sighted now, it will get to be less of a problem as you get older.

      Then you have to consider the problems that a lot of people have with night vision and halos.

      Besides, glasses make people look more intelligent.

    123. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by nschubach · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I know not a lot of people do this on a regular basis, but I target shoot with my father and he has had laser eye surgery and he has a hard time lining up iron sights because the fine space has refracted images of the side of the rear sight. It's not clear enough to get a good bearing.

      He used to easily take out ground hogs with his M1 Garand from about 150-200 yards with iron sights and he says it's much harder after the surgery.

      Granted, this is not exactly life shattering since the surgery gave him the ability to see clearly during his day job without contacts or glasses, but it has lessened something he enjoyed doing.

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    124. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by webdog314 · · Score: 1

      Actually, it's not like they are going in and writing new code or something. More like cut and paste. Color blindness is one of the most studied genetic traits. It just turns out that you can 'paste' the code for 'normal' color vision in over the defect and it works. It's a correction for something that my body missed because my mother carried a recessive gene. It's not like we can add-in something that isn't there someplace (yet). One the other hand, if we knew the exact code to cut and paste for bigger breasts, I'm sure women would be lining up in droves.

    125. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by genner · · Score: 1

      The moral dilemma is because of the implicit assumption that color-blindness is a fault that should be cured. It's just a societal notion that this is a flaw to be corrected; what if we figured out that there was a way to correct all those faulty brown eyes so that they were perfectly blue instead? Or let's say we could "fix" left handed people to be right handed? In other words, we're assuming a template for human beings the defines what is "correct". Similarly, there are segments of the deaf population who do not feel that being deaf is a flaw that needs fixing. If you ask "wouldn't you like to be able to hear stuff?" many will respond negatively, possibly suggesting that the better fix would be to alter other people's prejudices. To them the questions is as rude as asking "wouldn't you like to have blue eyes instead?" Color-blindness is not blindness, one can still see and distinguish colors. They're just distinguished in a different way from the general populace. Of course they can figure out traffic lights - red is on top, green is on the bottom. There is no handicap or disability here. If there's a problem in some configuration of lights or shades, then perhaps the fault lies with design that excluded a significant fraction of the populace. Imagine if someone designed a keyboard/mouse combination where the mouse was fixed to the right side of the keyboard; the left handers would legitimately claim that it was badly designed.

      If the color blindness is sever enough that they can't tell a red light from a green light you can't get a piolts license. So they have that going against them.

    126. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Scrameustache · · Score: 3, Funny

      Add the ability to convert Americans fat chicks into Sweden porn stars and you got yourself a deal.

      People have been using beer to achieve that effect for a long time.

      Yeah, but with beer the vomiting remains.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    127. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by quantumplacet · · Score: 3, Funny

      if your code crashes the system powering your sight, how will you see the debugger output?

    128. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Fingo11 · · Score: 1

      Its sad. The state of things has progressed to the point where idiotic questions are asked because we are afraid to make a single decision that might in some way offend someone's sensibilities. I would be willing to bet that there is now someone out there that is formulating a request for grant money to study the possibility of alienating a cross-section of the public by making their eyesight fully color spectrum aware. My God, I live in a society full of pussies.

    129. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by dangitman · · Score: 1

      They did indeed offer a variety of different courses to him simply because - by law - he would not be allowed to work with a large variety of systems based on e.g. old color coding of wiring (red and green for live and neutral) in houses.

      One would hope the school didn't teach people to use green for neutral, because that's the traditional color for earth.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    130. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      No, it ends with the less intellectually gifted being cured with the addition of suitable DNA to enhance their cerebral functions. So is it appropriate to attempt to 'cure' gullible knee jerk reactionary red necks or is it appropriate to leave them wallowing in their ignorance. You might consider that cure appropriate, hell, even they might consider that cure appropriate (although they will of course publicly deny it) but how about all those people they prey upon, abuse them and exploit them. Altough technically speaking that problem can also be cured with a few conscience gene's.

      Obviously poor eyesight whether colour or focus or clarity is a no brainer but that same technology can be used in other ways and not for people's benefit. Would the political right, controlled by corporate executives, pseudo religionists, mass media and lobbyists, consider intelligence harmful to their profit potential and seek a cure for that condition, for other people of course (sure cure those lat lack a conscience or 'er' fix those that can not be exploited by them).

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    131. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by zygotic+mitosis · · Score: 4, Funny

      Are you quite sure they're broken?

    132. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by hhawk · · Score: 1

      Forced genetic mods would be wrong and the Deaf community wants to preserve deaf-culture so that should be considered.. that is just asking the patient.

      But in terms of curing color blindness, let's do it, and I want the 4 coned' color that some women have (most women and all men have 3 color sight (RGB) I want four color :)

      --
      http://www.hawknest.com/
    133. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

      Ah, but where does it end?

      "Would you like ultra-wide spectrum super-HD eyes with 60x optical zoom, Internet-connected HUD and complimentary laser cannons, just like everyone else has?"

      You had me at laser cannons.

      Yes, I know that was the last thing you offered.

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
    134. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Count+Fenring · · Score: 1

      There's a LOT less light coming into your eyes than there is in daylight - it's not pure darkness or starlight, but night vision matters for nighttime driving.

      It's anecdotal evidence, but my mother has had decreased night vision due to age and a radial keratotomy, and it's definitely impacted her ability to see while driving.

    135. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Your.Master · · Score: 1

      Colourblind people have better contrast perception that coloursighted people. Deaf people can operate better in noisy environments. Both contains large subsets of people who are, by and large, happy with how they are and don't need to change. Much as I doubt we're going to chop the arms and legs off of too many women and replace them with cybernetics, even when the neural interface technology is there (what? having less strength on average than a man is a disability because it affects their ability to do $JOB without $TOOL_FOR_JOB).

      I might be more inclined to agree with you if there were literally no downside in any possible dimension.

    136. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Color blind people can see colors, and they can distinguish colors. The world isn't just shades of grey to them. The difference is that some colors that most people can distinguish trivially are difficult to distinguish. Maybe the opposite is true for some varieties of color blindness (and there are many types).

      I'm not saying never treat anyone if they want treating, I'm saying don't automatically treat people as defective if they don't measure up to some standards. This is especially true when the fix involves genetic manipulation (probably the big morale ambiguity here). Ie, do we want to use genetic manipulation for minor trivialities when we can't even get it right for the major problems? This isn't just a pair of glasses...

      Sure, some varieties of color blindness will be a factor in some jobs and activities. But since color blindness is not all that rare, maybe the solution isn't to treat it as a bug but as something to be figured into designs. I have color blind friends who deal just fine with electronics and resistor codes.

      We had this problem 50+ years ago, when being left-handed was considered a defect; and an impediment at times since so many tools are designed for right-handed people only. Teachers would try to correct/punish students who tried to use the "wrong" hand, to no avail. Eventually people realized that being left-handed was perfectly normal and you can easily get tools that work for left-handed people, and that no cure was necessary.

    137. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by OrangeCatholic · · Score: 1

      What's wrong with contacts? They're great for athletics, and you can swim and shower with them. Sometimes you can sleep with them. They rarely need manual cleaning, and they're cheap enough that you can throw them away.

      Oh yeah, and the "disposables" last for months.

    138. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by IICV · · Score: 1

      Genetically altering humans is a fairly big ethical question.

      No it fucking isn't. Humans who are capable of consenting to this procedure should be allowed to consent to this procedure. That's all that really matters.

    139. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Minwee · · Score: 1

      How about "Would you like your eyes altered in a way which might make them more like those of other people, but we're really not sure? All I can really promise is that you'll see things differently and that it's irreversible."

      Can I still hear a "Hell yeah"?

    140. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by HungryHobo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think Arthur C Clark touched on this in one of his books.

      If you have the ability to "correct" aberrations could there be fallout?
      If you could "fix" high functioning autistic so that they could be completely normal what kind of effect might that have on scientific fields which attract such people?
      What happens when you fix the obsessives so that instead of spending their evenings trying to solve theorems they go out and socialize?
      If you ask a teenager, who struggles to deal with people and is quite unhappy about not being normal, if he wants to be made normal- chances are he'll jump at it.
      Ask the same person 30 years later when his unusual brain structure or different ways of thinking about things or approaching problems has allowed him to become highly respected or wealthy and you may get a different answer.

      Look at the best and the brightest in almost any field and you'll find people who aren't normal.
      People who by certain measures could be considered to have various things wrong with them.
      If they had been given the option to be "fixed" the world might be a far poorer place.

    141. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by customizedmischief · · Score: 1

      Sent from my i.

      --
      Oops.
    142. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by moose_hp · · Score: 1

      I'm not red-green colorblind (I have no idea on the exact type, but it is not red-green) but I _heard_ that is generally acepted that colorblind people have better night vision, I can atest that anecdotally. (sorry I made no sence, i'm half asleep)

      --
      DON'T PANIC.
    143. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by OrangeCatholic · · Score: 1

      >For example, I used to spend some time in datacenters, and amber and green LEDs look pretty much identical

      As a non-colorblind person, I just looked at Wikipedia, and it seems red-green color blindness can be caused by either protanopia or deuteranopia, which is lacking the red or green cones.

      Interestingly, the symptoms are similar. In either case, you don't have red OR green. You just have blue, orange, and yellow (and amber=yellow turning brown).

      That's fucked up. Are trees yellow?

    144. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Farmer+Tim · · Score: 1

      Besides, glasses make people look more intelligent.

      Nobel prize material right here.

      --
      Blank until /. makes another boneheaded UI decision.
    145. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Thiez · · Score: 1

      > Cosmetic surgery allows people who should be less successful reproductively to fake their way in.

      "Should"? Survival of the fittest is not some law that we must follow. Besides, who are you to say that people who strive to improve themselves are inferior to those who do not (or don't feel the need to)?

      > More importantly, if we permanently alter the genetic makeup of these individuals, are we irrevocably sacrificing our species' genetic resilience in favor of quick answers to avoiding the inherent differences we all posess?

      Should we force people to live with a genetic disability because we *might* at some point in the future find that the disability has some advantage (that may or may not turn out to outweigh being handicapped) for the rest of us?

      Besides, maybe the technology can be applied locally (so that only the cells in the eyes are affected). I'd RTFA to find out but it doesn't seem to link to a story :/

    146. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by russotto · · Score: 1

      Yeah, the 'moral dilemma' is kinda silly. But why stop at curing colourblindness? When can I get my IR and UV vision?

      You already have UV vision, you need merely remove the UV filter. (that is, replace the lens with one clear in the UV range). It's kind of hard on the retina though.

    147. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Pentium100 · · Score: 1

      The moral dilemma is because of the implicit assumption that color-blindness is a fault that should be cured. It's just a societal notion that this is a flaw to be corrected; what if we figured out that there was a way to correct all those faulty brown eyes so that they were perfectly blue instead?

      Color blindness is a defect, the affected people cannot distinguish two colors, which may cause problems sometimes. Let's say that there is a light which can either be green or red depending on some conditions. A colorblind person wouldn't be able to see the difference.

      Brown or blue eyes do not affect any function. But if someone wanted to change their eye color, why not? They can dye their hair, why not let them dye their eyes?

      Similarly, there are segments of the deaf population who do not feel that being deaf is a flaw that needs fixing.

      It's their choice and we should respect it. But I think that there are a lot of deaf people who want to be able to hear things. The first group should not be able to force the second group remain deaf.

      Color-blindness is not blindness, one can still see and distinguish colors.

      Not all of them though. It would be the same as me saying that if a VGA cable has one pin broken and does nto show one color, then it is perfectly OK, because the image is still in color (but with a cyan/yellow/magenta tint).

      If there's a problem in some configuration of lights or shades, then perhaps the fault lies with design that excluded a significant fraction of the populace.

      No. Designing everything for colorblind people would leave the majority in almost the same situation. I have fully functioning color sensors, why can't I use them and encode 3 options on a single light (green/yellow/red for normal/warning/critical)? However, since the color blindness is not a choice, we should try to make the colorblind people be able to function almost normally. But the fact remains that color blindness is a disability, even though it is a lesser disability than most.

    148. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by The_Wilschon · · Score: 1

      Kind of like asking $sexual_preference people if they would like to be cured? Or perhaps asking $skin_colour people if they would like to be cured? Perhaps the "problem" is identifying colour blindness as a defect that needs a cure and trying to make all humans meet some baseline or be classified as defective.

      Sure. We can ask all the straight people if they would like to be "cured" to gay, and vice versa. We can ask all the Egyptians if they would like to be "cured" to Mongolian, the Samoans if they would like to be "cured" to Polish, the Welsh if they would like to be "cured" to French. If we have the capability to do these things, then why should we not offer to do them? Let the advertisers phrase things however they like. I fail to see that this would in fact cause any harm.

      We can already "cure" men to women and vice versa. Do you think that we should have kept that cat in the bag?

      Furthermore, if you stupid bleeding hearts deny me the only chance I'll ever have to properly see a rainbow, I will never forgive you. There is much beauty in the world that I cannot currently perceive. Who are you that you would dare deny me that?

      --
      SIGSEGV caught, terminating

      wait... not that kind of sig.
    149. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Yaa+101 · · Score: 1

      The real question that will arise is the following, would you like that job or would you like to be accepted by others?

      Then we will force you to take the cure, you really don't want the cure? ok we will declare you unwilling or a mental case...

      This is what it always goes to when people are involved.

    150. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by AusIV · · Score: 1

      As a colorblind guy, I would have no problem being asked this question, and no ill will towards people who say yes, but my answer would be "no thank you." I've been colorblind for 23 years so far, and I don't particularly care to alter my vision to "normal."

      The thing is, after the first generation or two of patients your question no longer applies. Parents would want to have their at-risk children tested and cured during early childhood (if not infancy). Kids wouldn't have the opportunity to make the decision for themselves. Personally I don't have a problem with that, but I think the ethical question is more applicable to people who would be cured before they could make their own decision.

    151. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      The idea of putting something ON my eye is something I'll never be comfortable with. I'm bad enough when it comes to eyedrops.

    152. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Thiez · · Score: 1

      There really is no selective pressure for humans to get a fuller range of vision. The chance of such a mutation appearing and spreading is probably (extremely close to) 0.

    153. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by anarche · · Score: 1

      http://www.toledo-bend.com/colorblind/aboutcb.asp

      red-green colourblind too, and i've heard the same rumour. apparently it's not true, but then i believe (based on personal experience) that i do see better in the dark

      perhaps I just like the dark...

      --
      Wait! Whats a sig?
    154. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Thiez · · Score: 1

      > Color blind men are just descendants of more predatory strains, that didn't need to see colors, because they hunted, they didn't gather fruit, they let the women do that.

      That doesn't even begin to make sense. The gene for colourblindness lies on the X-chromosome, which means that if all men in a tribe are colourblind, all the women will be too. If half of the men are colourblind, one quarter of the women will be as well. If seeing colours is an useful quality for your fruit-collecting women, then colourblindness among them will be rare, and as a consequence there won't be many colourblind men either.

      But please, point us to an article that claims that there were prehistoric people where most women could see colour and most men were colourblind.

    155. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Incorrect. Women are not immune to the color blindness gene. Most (but not all) forms of color blindness are sex-linked traits. That means that a woman has two of the relevant gene, while a man only has one. The color-blindness gene is recessive, so a woman is color-blind only if either A. her father is color-blind and her mother is color-blind, or B. with 50% probability if her father is color-blind and her mother is a carrier. A man would be color-blind if his mother is color-blind, or with 50% probability if his mother is a carrier.

      Thus, in males, the probability of a person exhibiting this trait is approximately equal to the percentage of colorblind copies of that gene in the general population, while in females, it is proportional to the square of that percentage. Thus, it occurs in 8% of the population, and should occur on the order of .64% of the female population. In practice, it actually occurs a little less frequently in the female population than that (about .4%), but I'm not sure what causes that additional discrepancy.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    156. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1

      An ethical question would be: "Is it okay to steel from the rich and corrupt and give to the poor?"

      Maybe we could steel from the rich and granite to the poor.

    157. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by anarche · · Score: 1

      Only partially true.

      My colourblind eyes prevent me from being a tank driver (spew!), but i've wired up plenty of trailers. Any bans against colourblind electricians (assuming you are from the US??) doesn't carry to the rest of the world.

      And I can figure out resister codes fine thanks (or did when we did electronics in primary school)...

      Its just finding flowers in trees that proves to be a problem.

      --
      Wait! Whats a sig?
    158. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      If you could "fix" high functioning autistic so that they could be completely normal what kind of effect might that have on scientific fields which attract such people?

      They'd become nicer places to work.

    159. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by mysidia · · Score: 1

      Switch to backup firmware.

      You can also have separate instances controlling left eye and right eye, and run the test code for only one eye at first.

      Also, if it's just a HUD, it crashing won't make you unable to see, it'll just make you unable to see the HUD displays... you could still plug an old-fashioned PC in with serial port (assuming you can still find an old one at that point), I guess

      Just make sure your install includes the external connectivity options

    160. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by TheMidget · · Score: 1

      Those deaf folks are just as dumb.

      Maybe. But in some situations being deaf can be an advantage. Such as when the disco downstairs blasts its noise all through the night, I'd wish I'd be deaf :-)

    161. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Cyberllama · · Score: 1

      No, I wouldn't. If everyone else has them, I want at least 120x optical zoom, ad-block on the HUD, and an automatic targeting program for the laser cannons.

      Oh, you kids and your laser canons. You know, in my day, we only had plasma canons -- and we got on just fine.

    162. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by clarkcox3 · · Score: 1

      Ah, but where does it end?

      "Would you like ultra-wide spectrum super-HD eyes with 60x optical zoom, Internet-connected HUD and complimentary laser cannons, just like everyone else has?"

      You say that like it's a bad thing. If such a treatment were available, I'd jump on it in a heartbeat.

      --
      There are no tiger attacks in my area and it's all because this rock I'm holding keeps the tigers away.
    163. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      Other colors are a lie! They don't exist! It's those hallucinogens in their koolaid making everyone imagine they're seeing green! or red! Ha!

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    164. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by anarche · · Score: 1

      Really? So their children who inherit the defects that are caused by the "cure" shouldn't have their rights considered?

      Wait 'til that lawsuit comes out and see if that's all that really matters.

      --
      Wait! Whats a sig?
    165. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Pentium100 · · Score: 1

      Orange and red colors on a resistor are very similar indeed. Now,, if both colors are on the same resistor then it's easy, but different resistors usually are painted in slightly different colors and what was supposed to be very dark orange on one resistor ends up being very light red on another. Also, if the resistor is a bit darker because of dust it also "helps". Also blue/violet sometimes look the same. Or at least it looks like this to me, I can see all three primary colors normally.

      But I suppose they had the guy tested and he was red/green colorblind.

    166. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by RightwingNutjob · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What kind of foggy-minded, mushy-headed, morality-agnostic incorrectness is this?!? We're talking about curing a physical disability. Something that doesn't just give someone a 'different', 'unique' or 'special' perspective on reality, but an affliction that removes and impedes capability to function as well as the rest of us. Would it be wrong to cure paralysis because it would destroy the culture of wheelchair basketball?

    167. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by anarche · · Score: 1

      No it's morally difference, since the "effects" of these treatments are passed into the next generations...

      Having said that, I think we've just generated a test for determining who should be allowed into the morality debate...

      --
      Wait! Whats a sig?
    168. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by drolli · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In my opinion (i am a physicist) the only good scientific field for highly functioning autists is math (because it may be possible to at least get a fixed position there), and even there i am not sure. In most other fields (including theoretical physics) the disadvantages seriously outweight the advantages. And with disadvantages i mainly mean the disadvantages for the autists. Do we have the right to drive somebody who is already isolated into total isolation, just because he does a good job at it? The important question would be to ask the autistic people is they like to stay autistic. In a world which is suited for autists they may want to. I am pretty sure i would take the cure in the very same way i would be willing to swallow antidepressants, drugs against epilepsy or ADD or wear glasses.

    169. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by metrometro · · Score: 1

      Already happening. It is relatively common for professional baseball players to get "corrective" eye surgery despite having perfectly good vision. A little pop with the laser and in most cases, you're seeing better than 20/20.

    170. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Thiez · · Score: 1

      > We had this problem 50+ years ago, when being left-handed was considered a defect; and an impediment at times since so many tools are designed for right-handed people only. Teachers would try to correct/punish students who tried to use the "wrong" hand, to no avail. Eventually people realized that being left-handed was perfectly normal and you can easily get tools that work for left-handed people, and that no cure was necessary.

      I actually got corrected for that. Can't say I regret it. An interesting detail is that when I try to write with my left hand my handwriting is very similar to what it was just before I became right-handed. When switching I went through a period of semi-ambidexterity, but I'm afraid I stopped training my left hand and and am not significantly different from a 'natural' right-handed person.

      But anyway, I don't see a problem with the handedness-correction thing.

    171. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by edisrafeht · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You seems to be biased toward utilitarianism. Let some people suffer so that they can become great scientists? You're making a lot of optimistic assumptions here.

    172. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by thrawn_aj · · Score: 5, Insightful
      You make a good point. However, there is a fundamental difference between fixing "aberrations" that are centered in the brain/endocrine glands and doing the same with purely physical ones. Yes, I know that Descartes was simply wrong about mind-body dualism (as concluded on the basis of empirical evidence, not pretty arguments) and you cannot separate the two. The point is that not every affliction makes you "special" (though Hollywood or Lifetime would have you believe otherwise). That's a little bit like thinking gamma rays turn you into the Hulk instead of the reality where they'd just fry you up (but subtler, because mental illnesses still have that aura of mystery around them). In most cases, metal illnesses are just plain torture on the afflicted without conferring any offsetting benefits like you see so often in popular culture. For examples, please see this highly engaging article on Cracked (yes, it's Cracked, but it's quite insightful in this case). We absolutely should be wary of mental illness cures but that doesn't mean they don't exist. We have come a long way from the sadistic meathouses of yesteryear when it comes to treating mental illnesses. Things do converge towards an answer more often than not. But everything you or I have said so far is only marginally relevant to the main aspect of the debate.

      The only relevant thing here is that it would be immoral to withhold treatment of ailments that the person chooses to have cured in the here and now just because a bunch of people (like the dissenter in tfa) have a certain idea of "the way things should be". By all means, have this discussion with the person before the cure (in the same way that some clinics make patients go through mandatory counseling prior to life-changing procedures like abortion). But we simply do not have the right, moral or otherwise, to make that decision for someone else. By the way, that distinction makes this argument highly asymmetric. It is simply not pro/against. It is a case of the debaters (you and I) just not having the moral right to choosing for someone else (in a situation where their needs can be satisfied without hurting someone else - I say this carefully to make my point inextensible to something like abortion [just don't want to mix this up with that can of worms]).

      In the example you used, I would be saddened beyond words if we lost a potential genius because he chose to fix something like OCD or autism and lead a normal life. But that does not give me the right to prevent him from making that choice. After all, people make that choice everyday when it comes to choosing a profession and no one ever suggests that such choices are morally wrong. There were at least three bona fide geniuses in my graduating class who could have (potentially) made revolutionary discoveries in the basic sciences had they chosen to do so. Instead, they decided that they would be happier in a more commercial setting with the purpose of making a good living. The world is a poorer place because of that choice. But I do not believe that anyone had the right to make that decision for them. Are the people afflicted with such diseases then less human than normal folk that a similar choice on their part (to be happy in a narrowly defined sense instead of being "special") is immoral? Kind of a selective and twisted morality if you ask me.

      The world cannot be made richer by the unwilling sacrifices of the afflicted. You may be surprised how many of these savants actually decline such cures. Believe it or not, the truly special people often place high importance on the things that make them special and willingly sacrifice mere happiness for the more elusive satisfaction.

      Sorry for being so verbose. I should have just said that the title of the first post pretty much says it all, and far more effectively than I just did -

      WTF? Just ask the patient

      QED

    173. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by thrawn_aj · · Score: 1

      Yes, please, where do I swipe my card?

      It's a brave new future we're heading into.

      You can get the CC Reader slot addon installed in your ... ah ... nether regions for an extra grand.

    174. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by timmarhy · · Score: 1
      your fucking mad. I have perfect sight but my sister in law had terrible sight until LASIK, she swears by it and i can definately see an improvement in her quality of life because of it.

      when the time comes, i'll definately get it.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    175. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Now that's interesting... and probably explains why colour-blindness didn't get naturally-selected entirely out of the gene pool -- it probably conferred an advantage under certain hunting conditions, sufficiently useful to the entire tribe:

      "Hey, Og, we know you trip over the grass, but can you spare a moment to help Gronk spot that deer??"

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    176. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Pence128 · · Score: 1

      I don't think there's much selective pressure for much of anything in humans anymore. Strength has been replaced by machines, pathogen resistance has been replaced by medicine, you can even artificially improve your attractiveness to the opposite sex. (or same sex, if you're into that) I think soon (hundreds of years soon, not next week) we will be forced to resort to genetic engineering just to keep from dieing of cancer or something by the time we're a year old.

      --
      404: sig not found.
    177. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Kral_Blbec · · Score: 1

      Pros vs Cons
      There are (debatably) pros to being a highly functional autistic. It can be a benefit to a science/music/social services career, and becomes a large part of that persons identity and daily life. Some might say they like it that way. They cant say they prefer it that way, because they have never had anything else to compare it too. I can't think of any benefit of being color blind, and I've never met anyone that is who wouldn't rather just have fully functional sight. To most, if not all, it is an annoyance rather than part of their identity.

    178. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Kral_Blbec · · Score: 1

      He is also older. Unless you are comparing shooting the day before and after the surgery, then there are many other variables to account for.

    179. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Pence128 · · Score: 1

      but that isn't all it takes. colour blind people can't distinguish between colours, so they distinguish between contrasting shades instead. Just like how completely blind people can hear really well, and feel those tiny bumps in braille. (I can't even count them, let alone judge their relative positions)

      --
      404: sig not found.
    180. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you ask a teenager, who struggles to deal with people and is quite unhappy about not being normal, if he wants to be made normal- chances are he'll jump at it.

      I don't consider myself as having "aspergers" or whatever the modern fad geek fad calls it, but I do know that by many standards I would be considered "odd". I have known that I was odd for quite some time (initially, I simply thought everyone else was odd), and while sometimes I have thought about how it would be nice to be like most people sometimes, I have always been happy with the way I am. If you had asked me--at any time--whether I wanted to be "fixed" to be just like almost everyone else, I'm confident I would have said no. Though sometimes I was envious of aspects of other people, I never wanted to be like them, because I also saw the negatives to their way of living(But never to my conceited own of course).

      Of course, if you'd asked my parents at any point whether they'd like me changed, they would have said "Yes Please!". I don't hold it against them, because I can see exactly why they would; everyone wants that set of perfect children, loved by all and sundry. Left to the realm of private industry, all oddball like me would be "fixed" fairly quickly in life.

      But I know, and you know, that oddness goes with the territory when it comes to technology, science, and just about any other involved academic discipline. Most normal people will not spend several hours trying to work out a theorem, build a full adder, dissect a frog, read a 14th century ledger, stare at a star chart, etc, etc. These activities are all, as activities go, very odd. But they are also very useful. A normal person with a normal social, work and family life is not going to have the time or the inclination to do any of these things. The world needs oddballs, and for all we know, it may needs colour blind people too.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    181. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      Yes Please.

      And a 500 year life span.

      And the ability to perform when I want to, as long as I want to.

      And a full head of hair.

      And something to get the damn kids off my lawn!

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    182. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by a+whoabot · · Score: 1

      "Neither $skin_color people nor $sexual_preference people have a body part that fails to function correctly. In the case of color-blind people, our eyes do not function correctly."

      So I was in Cuba and I was left with a terrible burn as I'm quite pale. I can't help but think that my skin with its pale colour failed to function correctly while my friend's darker skin functioned well.

      And, as for the converse, I've never seen this personally before, but I have heard of people with dark skin developing rickets in the UK for example.
           

    183. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by martas · · Score: 1

      fall back on Xorg's default driver?

    184. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by mysidia · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But that's not really the point. Being color-sighted isn't better in every scenario, thus there will always be a beneficial situation for colorblind folk.

      Being color-sighted is better in approximately every scenario.

      Just because you have 1 scenario where a color blind person had better job performance, does not mean there is a class of scenarios where it's better to be color blind.

      It's definitely a leap in logic to suggest there will always be a beneficial situation for colorblind folk.

      Inadequate justification that not everyone needs to be color-sighted.

    185. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by quenda · · Score: 4, Funny

      If the patient thinks this is a moral grey area, he need the treatment stat!

    186. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by timmarhy · · Score: 1

      it hasn't bothered the monkeys. this is what clinical trials are all about, and it's not a reason not to proceed.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    187. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by compro01 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Something that doesn't just give someone a 'different', 'unique' or 'special' perspective on reality, but an affliction that removes and impedes capability to function as well as the rest of us.

      Actually, colourblindness can be legitimately described as a unique perspective on reality. One of my high school friends is fully red colourblind (protanopia). He's in the military where his colourblindness is an asset. Most camouflage is almost useless against him due to the patterns being designed with normal colour vision in mind. He also has far better night vision than a person with normal vision would have.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    188. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      All you have to do is have your pupil size checked. With modern lasers and surgical practice, you will not have problems with glare or starbursts unless you have larger-than-normal pupils.

      Failing that, PRK is still an option, too. The only reasons not to have refractive surgery at this point in time are if you're (a) a total wuss, or (b) unable to afford it.

    189. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by canadian_right · · Score: 1

      It is a common side effect of laser eye surgery, and likely has nothing to do with getting older. The most common problems are dry-eye, reduced contrast, and glare issues. These are generally mild enough to not be noticed except in low light conditions like driving at night.

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    190. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by turing_m · · Score: 1

      an automatic targeting program for the laser cannons.

      ****ing botter! I'm surprised you didn't ask for X-ray vision as well! (But be careful what you wish for.)

      http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/top-stories/2010/03/23/amazing-x-ray-picture-boy-gets-stabbed-in-the-head-with-10-inch-knife-after-row-over-counter-strike-computer-game-115875-22132969/

      --
      If I have seen further it is by stealing the Intellectual Property of giants.
    191. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by eltaco · · Score: 1

      "would you like to see all the colors?" yes
      "(..) like everyone else can?" no
      that's exactly the point she's making.

      having said that, this isn't really new in any way. there have been genocides of non-conforming people - and many of those who were persecuted acted like they were "normal". for instance jewish people in nazi germany, christians today in many predominantly muslim countries like egypt for one.

      all that has really changed is that it has now become a personal choice (speaking of DNA - not religion).

      furthermore, if anything, this is an ethical question. Morals are subjective and I don't give a flying frack about anyone else's but mine.

      --
      It's not about fate, it's about character.
      there be no shelter here, the frontline is everywhere!
    192. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by myrikhan · · Score: 1

      Ah, but where does it end?

      "Would you like ultra-wide spectrum super-HD eyes with 60x optical zoom, Internet-connected HUD and complimentary laser cannons, just like everyone else has?"

      Hell yes. And sharks with laser beams.

    193. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by brandonicus · · Score: 1

      Genetic modification through virii doesn't necessarily effect all or any of the reproductive system. It's very likely that you could create a genetic elite but they'd need to tailor their children and their children's children... creating a new species in this fashion would be quite difficult. Also, as a result, any genetic defects you were born with would be passed on to your kids (for you to cure presumably at some expense). This would prevent the whole deal with not wanting people to pass on their defective genes... everyone would still have 'em, they'd just remove their expression in their own persons. That being said, who's seen GATACA?

    194. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by astar · · Score: 1

      this lady who is worried is a common kind of philosophical disaster. we have all sorts of instrumentalities and using them or not is not usually considered a moral issues. most people treat them as the same sort of thing as natural senses. and if you are a platoist, you do not think any of your senses or instruments have much to directly say about reality. (sense-certainity vs sense-conception) but you might think well of three-d vision since it seems to have some sort of nice mapping to reality.

    195. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by r00t · · Score: 1

      We don't kill sterile couples, nor gays, do we?

      As far as evolution goes, they are pretty much dead already. They might have a minor effect caused by a distinction between how they relate to blood relatives and others. (they can help a sibling find a spouse, or they can commit a racially-motivated killing)

      FYI, there are plenty of countries that do kill gays. It's common among countries that are African or Islamic. Uganda is joining the list right now.

    196. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Zemran · · Score: 1

      First off, I am colourblind. Unlike in the casual 10% of cases, I am not just colourblind to one or two combinations but to them all. I am an extreme case. Would I want to see colours like everyone else? No way. Why would I?

      Colourblindness is not a loss of something. I can still see colour just like you do but if someone writes on an orange piece of paper with a green pen, I cannot read it. I do not often find this a problem. Until someone asked me to read numbers written in dots amongst other coloured dots, I was unaware that I was colourblind. I had always thought that my eyes were much better than everyone else's as I knew that my nightvision etc. was far better than most people. I had never had a problem with reading numbers written with dots before and do not see that as a great problem in life. Nightvision is a far greater asset.

      In your eyes you have rods and cones. The rods see contrast and the cones see colour. I have far more rods than you and less cones. Therefore I can see contrast far better than you but the colour is not as clear. I still see the same colour as you do but when there is a mass of different colours I cannot seperate them as well. But I can see the shapes in that mass of colour that you cannot see. This is why colourblind people are best as bomb aimers, they are not deceived by camoflage.

      I think that overall I am a winner and would laugh at the idea of a cure. Why would I want your inferior eyesight?

      --
      I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
    197. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by ProfessionalCookie · · Score: 1
      ...You're right but another question just popped into my head: Who pays for it?

      Up until this year I would have said the answer is clear.

    198. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Rick+Bentley · · Score: 1

      "Would you like ultra-wide spectrum super-HD eyes with 60x optical zoom, Internet-connected HUD and complimentary laser cannons, just like everyone else has?"

      Hell yes.

      I'm waiting for the next version with 72x and photon cannons.

      --
      My favorite quote doesn't fit into 120 characters. Now no one will like me.
    199. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Sitnalta · · Score: 1

      Speciation is a natural, inevitable process. It's going to happen whether we want it to or not. It's arrogant to think that the way we are now is the greatest and purist state of being.

      This is what the singularity is all about. We can pretend to think that controlling our own evolution is a great moral choice... but the choice is an illusion. It's an offer we can't refuse. The reality is those who are augmented (or have their children augmented) will have a massive advantage over everybody else. Over time (perhaps several generations) those who have chosen to be pure human will find themselves increasingly pushed to the margins. Perhaps not from any direct conflict or extermination... but, you know... cancer, viruses, hovercar accidents... if those things are more likely to kill humans than the augments then raw statistics are going to take over.

      Even if we universally banned genetic engineering, there will be a black market. It's just too tantalizing an idea to bury.

    200. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by jtcm · · Score: 1

      If you could "fix" high functioning autistic so that they could be completely normal what kind of effect might that have on scientific fields which attract such people?

      I'm not sure that's an apples-to-apples comparison. Toying with the way the brain functions is quite different from repairing a physical abnormality.

      I would liken curing color blindness to curing a physical ailment, not a mental one. Would you have any moral qualms about using medical science to repair the legs of a man bound to a wheelchair?

      --
      @ASP.NET's parent-teacher meeting: "Little Johnny.NET is very bright, but he doesn't play well with others."
    201. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by mysidia · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If treatment to correct color blindness is immoral, then so is Lasik surgery to correct nearsightedness / astigmatism. Bring that further... making glasses for people with nearsightedness would be immoral on that same basis 'normalizing' the experience indeed.

      And prosthetics for people born with just one leg would also be immoral.

      Surgery to separate conjoined twins would also be immoral (even if they both wanted it).

      Why are they coming up with bullshit reasons to call a procedure immoral such as "trying to normalize humans to a threshold of experience"

      Of course we're trying to normalize the experience of those people who were in the unfortunate position of having a genetic disadvantage that causes physical disability compared to most of the population.

      It's only natural for people to want to better themselves.

      I do believe that attempting to impose your morals on others is immoral, particularly when you inconsistently are okay with other things that violate the same principals

      Much of the population has some sort of modification, even if it's just that they wear contact lenses all day every day to "correct" their vision.

    202. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by hitmark · · Score: 1

      bomb aimer? interesting choice of example.

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    203. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by RobinEggs · · Score: 1

      Similarly, there are segments of the deaf population who do not feel that being deaf is a flaw that needs fixing. If you ask "wouldn't you like to be able to hear stuff?" many will respond negatively, possibly suggesting that the better fix would be to alter other people's prejudices.

      Yeah, but liking who they are and standing up to supposed prejudice isn't entirely why they do it: part of it is simple pride, fear, and solidarity with their group. I had a speaker in some civics class point out once that sometimes homeless people will feel as if they've sold out and abandoned their community when they get a job and a solid residence; sometimes they'll even return to the street out of loneliness and guilt. I have a damn hard time imagining someone remaining homeless just to stick it to prejudice against the homeless, and there's clearly no moral confusion about fixing homelessness, but it's analogous to deaf persons who chose to stay deaf. Sometimes deaf people refuse implants for fear of losing what makes them special, sometimes they're afraid of selling out or losing friends, and it's almost never exclusively about sticking it to prejudice or thinking you're completely perfect as you already exist.

    204. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by rhendershot · · Score: 1

      you can add that filter for a few $$$ more. It doesn't integrate with the targeting system yet, sorry. Perhaps if someone would like to do such an enhancement. Check our wiki page for build instructions.

    205. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by HappyEngineer · · Score: 1

      That was a very interesting article, but couldn't the same effect be achieved by using a video camera that displayed video in b&w or whatever it is that color blind people see?

    206. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by omfgnosis · · Score: 1

      I wrote a rather lengthy reply, but I think the following sums it up sufficiently, if you consider the implications.

      Suppose (because I don't know) you have foreskin. Would you like to be cured?

    207. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by omfgnosis · · Score: 1

      You're defective because you can't see the light spectrum outside the spectrum you see? Then we're all defective. Congratulations, you have a point without a point.

    208. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Ifandbut · · Score: 1

      Brother Cavil: I saw a star explode and send out the building blocks of the Universe. Other stars, other planets and eventually other life. A supernova! Creation itself! I was there. I wanted to see it and be part of the moment. And you know how I perceived one of the most glorious events in the universe? With these ridiculous gelatinous orbs in my skull! With eyes designed to perceive only a tiny fraction of the EM spectrum. With ears designed only to hear vibrations in the air.

      Brother Cavil: I don't want to be human! I want to see gamma rays! I want to hear X-rays! And I want to - I want to smell dark matter! Do you see the absurdity of what I am? I can't even express these things properly because I have to - I have to conceptualize complex ideas in this stupid limiting spoken language! But I know I want to reach out with something other than these prehensile paws! And feel the wind of a supernova flowing over me! ... I can experience so much more. But I'm trapped in this absurd body!

      Brother Cavil said it best. If someone said they could give me a shot and then a few weeks later I would go from thick glasses to better then 20/20 my only question would be "Can I charge it?"

    209. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Merls+the+Sneaky · · Score: 1

      Left handers will do what they have always done. Deal. Lots of power tools are designed with right handers in mind, no thought to lefties. Even a simple can opener you have to buy from a specialty store (and pay a premium).

    210. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by TheLink · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > He's in the military where his colourblindness is an asset. Most camouflage is almost useless against him due to the patterns being designed with normal colour vision in mind.
      > He also has far better night vision than a person with normal vision would have

      An asset maybe to the grunts on the ground...

      Might not be so good for those in vessels or vehicles or aircraft who need to know the difference between "green=systems OK, and red = something is wrong". Hey I didn't pick those colours. Somehow they became a standard - red = stop/bad, green = go/OK.

      FWIW, it's not that difficult to give people with normal colour-vision some goggles that'll produce the same effect - colourblindness and better night-vision.

      In contrast it was impossible to cure colourblindness, till now...

      --
    211. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by TapeCutter · · Score: 4, Informative

      "In my opinion (i am a physicist) the only good scientific field for highly functioning autists is math"

      Temple Grandin would disagree, she is autistic and the worlds foremost expert on animal handling facilities. She is known as the woman who thinks like a cow because she believes her autisim gives her insights into animal behaviour.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    212. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Plunky · · Score: 1

      The important question would be to ask the autistic people is they like to stay autistic.

      Except, depending on the severity of their autism (or 'difference to normal' if you like), they may not understand the question? Or they may understand the question but not what relevance it has to them? Or they might completely understand but not care enough to be cured?

      I am pretty sure i would take the cure in the very same way i would be willing to swallow antidepressants, drugs against epilepsy or ADD or wear glasses.

      I have known epileptics who don't like taking the drugs which are basically some kind of tranquilisers. They can feel the difference in their everyday life, it flattens their experiences. Similarly I've met depressives who just don't want anti-depressants because they are too far gone in their own misery. The ethical question is, at what stage do you decide that a person is not competent to make the decision?

    213. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Bartab · · Score: 1

      Colourblindness is not a loss of something. I can still see colour just like you do but if someone writes on an orange piece of paper with a green pen, I cannot read it.

      So in other words, you lied. It is a loss of something.

      In fact, color blindness can be dangerous, common signals used in all transport agencies; air, marine, train, all use signals that are hard or impossible to distinguish for the colorblind. Not only are you unable to take any number of jobs, but even recreational activities would be potentially dangerous.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    214. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by snowgirl · · Score: 1

      There are a number of DSM conditions that are not really a problem unless they start causing profound issues with the person's life.

      There are already a number of conditions that can be corrected if they must be... but the question still remains: is this problem so bad that the risks involved in the cure outweigh the dangers involved in the process. No medical cure is without side-effects, or dangers of incorrect application. This retrovirus correcting your red-green colorblindness might also kill off all of your red/green cones.

      As always, if this is causing a problem with the person's life, and they have given informed consent as to the corrective procedure, then ok.

      It's the same with depression. Everyone gets depressed once and awhile, but the question is, has it become so profound that it needs correction.

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
    215. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by snowgirl · · Score: 1

      But the fact remains that color blindness is a disability, even though it is a lesser disability than most.

      But color blindness is not as big of a disability, because we actually account for it, and it is not actively discriminated against.

      If people are fine with it, and do not want to risk the cure, then fine. That's their choice. They do not HAVE to be fixed, that's the whole point of a right of self determination. Parents forcing a cure on a child can be just as bad in some cases, and there are certain well accepted medical conditions that parents cannot consent for on behalf of their children.

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
    216. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by gig · · Score: 1

      Yeah ... but color blindness? I think this is the wrong place to draw the line. We slap a pair of glasses on people to correct vision all the time. Is there any advantage to color blindness at all? It's more like a cleft palate than Asbergers.

      And I'm much more concerned with the fact that there are so many untreated medical issues around me every day in the US due to no health system than I am that people are getting too many cures. More concerned that the recent health care "reform" did not fix this. If we get to where people are getting too many cures ... I might prefer that over what we have now.

      Also, I'm more horrified by doctors mutilating a newborn's genitals than I am by a doctor curing their color blindness.

    217. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by ultranova · · Score: 1

      You know, I recall there was one mutant who had four, instead of the usual three, different color sensing cells in his eyes. The result was that he had much better color vision than baseline human. It might be possible to induce that in baseline humans using this very same technique. So the question becomes:

      "Would you like to improve your vision?"

      I would.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    218. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by CyberNigma · · Score: 1

      That's a traditional case of society vs individual.. Allow the person to 'fix' or change themselves and you put the individual over the society. Prevent them from doing so in order to minimize society's loss and you put the society over the individual.

      Basically it's about whether that individual has the choice or the society has the choice.

      That leads down another road of course of putting society before the individual.

    219. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by maxwell+demon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Short-sightedness can also be viewed as unique perspective on reality. After all, you can see at close distances where other people can't. Yet AFAIK no one has ever had any moral problems with correcting it.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    220. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by sourcerror · · Score: 1

      As far as evolution goes, they are pretty much dead already.

      But that's exactly the point I wanted to make. If you accidentally mutate a man too much, so that he becomes a new species, how will he find a woman, he procreate with? He can't.

    221. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Dr+Damage+I · · Score: 1

      Helping people fulfil ambitions to work in electrical engineering or aviation is a fools errand? Kinda harsh, yes?

      --
      "Cursed is he who rises early in the morning..." Isiah 5:11
    222. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by dov_0 · · Score: 1

      It's not necessarily just about seeing all the colours. A lot of us just see colours slightly differently.

      So. Would I risk someone screwing around with my DNA and possibly what I pass on to my children so I can see colours a little bit differently?

      Hell no!

      --
      sudo mount --milk --sugar /cup/tea /mouth /etc/init.d/relax start
    223. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by tricorn · · Score: 1

      Putting on a pair of glasses with a color filter is a simple way to give someone the ability to be color-blind, in those rare cases such as this where it would be an advantage. It's not so easy going the other way. Interesting article, nonetheless.

    224. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by syousef · · Score: 1

      Or, if it makes her feel better to not call it a cure..."Would you like to see all the colors, like just about everyone else can?"

      Or in her case "Would you like fries with that?"

      Then again advanced burger mechanics might be beyond her ken.

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
    225. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by compro01 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yeah, I'm slightly (-1.75 diopters) nearsighted myself and the better vision closeup is why I still wear glasses rather than contacts (easier to remove when I read or work at a computer) and don't plan on getting corrective surgery unless things change dramatically (prescription hasn't changed at all in the 7 years since I got glasses, so I figure it isn't likely to change anytime soon).

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    226. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by ildon · · Score: 1

      Then he could elect not to have his vision corrected.

    227. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Aladrin · · Score: 1

      Of course, you're assuming that the colorblindness is responsible for his enhanced vision, when it may be that he has some other genetic anomaly that increases his visual acuity. It could be possible for him to see all the colors -and- have his extra vision abilities as well.

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
    228. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by ultranova · · Score: 1

      I can still see colour just like you do but if someone writes on an orange piece of paper with a green pen, I cannot read it.

      In other words, you don't see colour as I do. I see orange and green differently, which is why I can separate them, while you see them the same. It follows that you see at least one of them differently than I do.

      I think that overall I am a winner and would laugh at the idea of a cure. Why would I want your inferior eyesight?

      Whatever works for you.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    229. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      Add the ability to convert Americans fat chicks into Sweden porn stars and you got yourself a deal.

      People have been using beer to achieve that effect for a long time.

      Yeah, but with beer the vomiting remains.

      That's a feature, not a bug. It's a method to allow you to rapidly remove yourself from a situation when the transformative affects of the beer begin to wear off...

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    230. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Threni · · Score: 1

      People get electrocuted due to colourblindness.

    231. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Delkster · · Score: 1

      Not to mention that for every "non-normal" person who becomes successful partially thanks to their eccentricity there are a whole bunch of non-normal people who predominantly suffer from it. They just aren't quite as visible because, well, you know, they didn't become successful.

      Sure being in the top 1% or even the top 10% of anything probably means you need to have something that distinguishes you from the rest, pretty much by definition. But how many people are "non-normal" and don't fit in the top? And do the bottom 10% also have features that distinguish them from most other people?

      Saying that fixing deficiencies is generally wrong because many extraordinary people have deficiencies doesn't make much sense. Not that anybody really went so far as to suggest that here.

    232. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by jazcap · · Score: 1

      What if the *ground hogs* had "ultra-wide spectrum super-HD eyes with 60x optical zoom, Internet-connected HUD and complimentary laser cannons"?

    233. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Imagine what it would be like having things suddenly appear very different than they were previously.

      Based on all tests, extra sensory input gets integrated in a matter of few weeks. There was an article on Slashdot just a while ago about an electric eye that transmits images into small electric shocks on the tongue (!), and the test subjects learned to use it to see just fine.

      Color blindness ultimately has a much larger impact than on what people expect it to have. Curing it could very easily have unintended consequences that aren't so easy to handle.

      Anything could have unexpected consequences, but there's overwhelming evidence that this won't.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    234. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by The_mad_linguist · · Score: 1

      Tests that involve giving people the ability to see novel colors, such as this one:

      http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/fulltext/122217490/main.html,ftx_abs#h4

      don't seem to have any negative effects.

    235. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Gandalf_Greyhame · · Score: 1

      Yes, please, where do I swipe my card?

      Trust me, you don't want to know

      --
      I am not stubborn. I am right!
    236. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      On the other hand, my tennis coach was in the Marines and not allowed to work with camouflage because his colorblindness made it so he couldn't hide himself properly. He'd think he was camouflaged and the sergeant would just walk over and pick him out automatically.

    237. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by radtea · · Score: 1

      That's even dumber than the first question.

      I'm expecting that next week we'll see some breathless idiot asking, "Waking up in the morning... is it morally justified?"

      Slashdot: Questions for the Logically Disabled; Rhetoric that Doesn't Matter.

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    238. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Sounds like we have a solution then.

      Just have the military do everything in its power to suppress this technology, because it makes people less fit to die in wars. Make sure this gets leaked to the press.

      Now all the people who would be arguing to ban this technology will knee-jerk and ensure that it is provided free to every school child!

    239. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      The important question would be to ask the autistic people is they like to stay autistic.

      Except, depending on the severity of their autism (or 'difference to normal' if you like), they may not understand the question? Or they may understand the question but not what relevance it has to them?

      Or they might just sit there, rocking backwards and forwards going "Nmmmmmmmmmmmmmm".

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    240. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by nanoakron · · Score: 1

      >makes her feel better

      Did you RTFA? This is a disease of MEN.

      Of are you just being stupidly and unnecessarily PC by modifying all your personal pronouns to compensate for the 'historic oppression' of womyn?

    241. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by forebees · · Score: 1

      Fair enough too.

      Given that they won't be trawling the streets looking for people 'to do this to' I can't see the problem.

      If you are colour blind it reduces your ability to do quite a few things and has few advantages.

      Further, regarding some posters comments about 'curing' autism, I'd be interested to know how someone would be given the option of having the general competencies that most people have as against serious limitations.

      Most people who have self-awareness and experience serious levels of intellectual disability are painfully aware of their personal limitations. Few would want to keep them given a choice Yes, I have worked in the field. Yes, I have relatives and friends who have impairments. Yes, I know some deaf people consider they have a culture worth keeping. No, regarding the latter, I don't think they've got an advantage that out-weighs the disadvantage. Check out the interviews of people who have gone deaf after being a hearing person. These people really know the difference.

    242. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by mad_minstrel · · Score: 1

      I'm -1.5 and it's impossible for me to work without glasses. You must be sitting way too close to the screen. Either that or you're using a large screen and low resolution. I only take off my glasses when working on something very small, or reading (something that fits in my hands).

      --
      May the source be with you.
    243. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by forebees · · Score: 1

      I have a rel who is a nurse and another who is a pilot for a major airline flying 747s.

      The airline was well aware the latter rel was going to have the surgery and he had to then be checked by their doctors.

      Both had Lasik surgery and neither have reported any problems.

      I know this may not help, but thought I'd report it to you anyway :))

    244. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by khallow · · Score: 1
      First, we can ask people later, if they want to be cured or changed of something they were born with. This treatment sounds like it would be effective at any stage in life, not just a germ line treatment.

      The only way that one could reasonably be asked if they want to be cured would involve time travel.

      We've already established that parents have very wide, decision-making authority here. We have an example where parents choose to have a deaf child. They however were themselves deaf and there was a reasonable expectation that the child would have plenty of opportunity to live a fulfilling life. Another example that comes up in discussions of intergenerational space travel to other star systems. What right do parents have to give birth to their kids on a relatively small ship lightyears away from anything, much less the rest of humanity? Whatever it is, they've had it since the beginning of life on Earth. And of course, there's the matter of children raised in a cult or other unpopular religion.

      As I see it, parents have much more power over the birth of their children than merely making them more "normal". Why should it be more moral for a child to be born with color blindness than not? I imagine that if a person later wants to experience color blindness, there will be all sorts of ways to do that without requiring that person to be born colorblind.

    245. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Hadlock · · Score: 1

      This whole article reeks of the doctor wishing she was in an episode of Grey's Anatomy or Scrubs.
       
      "But Docktah! I can't have because it "

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    246. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by FrozenGeek · · Score: 1

      "In all fairness it is a valid question to pose. Genetically altering humans is a fairly big ethical question. Granted curing color blindness is fairly harmless, but once we know how to do that and accept it can be done it pretty much stands to reason that we will find out how to do other things and will accept doing those."

      True, once we learn how to genetically alter humans, we will be faced with the question of what alterations are ethical, moral, acceptable... However, the fact that a technique raises questions does not make a specific use, in and of itself, unethical, immoral, unacceptable. Consider the concept that we should not create explosives because they could be used to harm people. That is true, but explosives can also be used to facilitate mining, construction, etc. There is no doubt, for instance, that Alfred Nobel's invention has been a boon to mankind (even though some have abused it). There are [more expensive] alternatives to explosives. But many of the issues that gene-therapy could resolve have no good alternative cures (there may be the means of treating the symptoms, but no cures). Should we deny the cure on the fear that someone else may abuse the technique?

      When I was in grade school, I frequently encountered teachers who, rather than try and determine which two or three students were talking in class, would simply give the entire class detention. Rather than deal with the specific case of abuse, they took the easy way out and penalized everyone. Banning gene-therapy on the fear that someone might abuse it is wrong. It unfairly penalizes those who have done nothing wrong but might well benefit from it.

      --
      linquendum tondere
    247. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Sancho · · Score: 1

      I think that his point was that the world should operate with colorblind people in mind, and therefore things like capacitors should be marked with colors that colorblind people can distinguish. I think this is what he was saying due to his reference to the deaf population who would rather everyone else change their behavior than they be given a cure.

      One of the extreme fears in this vein is that if we gain a cure for deafness, then suddenly deafness becomes a choice. The world no longer needs to accommodate the deaf any more than they need to accommodate people who voluntarily walk through life with their eyes closed. Things like the ADA and frankly a whole lot of liberal policies go right out of the window, and there's a considerable power shift. Of course, all of this is masked in the "We want people to be individuals and have choices" rhetoric.

      It's a valid fear, to an extent. When you've got what most of us would call a disability, you're special. When people have to make accommodations for you, you have power over them. There's no question that power brings about a surge of positive emotions and feelings in most people. Then there's the sense of community and camaraderie of being in a group of people like you. Both of these could contribute to a deaf person's desire to remain deaf rather than receive a cure. Being well on our way to universal health care, cost may once have been a factor but is not likely to be one for long.

    248. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Sancho · · Score: 1

      Absolutely. And if I decide to walk around all day with my eyes closed and earplugs in my ears, I fully expect the government to make accommodations so that I can live a normal, happy life.

    249. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by sorak · · Score: 1

      But what about denying Clark's hypothetical people the choice, simply because we hope that their suffering will lead them to do something that benefits us? How wrong is that?

    250. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by biryokumaru · · Score: 1

      Are you getting 50 cents for these posts? "Those who do not conform from birth are inferior, and must be cleansed!"

      --
      When you're afraid to download music illegally in your own home, then the terrorists have won!
    251. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by cvd6262 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Great point.

      The obvious parallel here is hearing impairment. The deaf community does not consider themselves to be disabled (though that confuses me when a deaf individual sues for accommodation under ADA). When cochlear implants became possible in the 80's, deaf protests were held outside Senate hearings on whether to cover them with Medicare.

      --

      I'd rather have someone respond than be modded up.

    252. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Hadlock · · Score: 1

      Ooops. Should have used preview instead. Slashdot doesn't like use of chevrons.
       
      This whole article reeks of the doctor wishing she was in an episode of Grey's Anatomy or Scrubs.
       
      "But Docktah! I can't have [insert life threatening illness, curable only by surgery] because it [insert deep personal secret patient must overcome and reveal to the people they care about to have surgery]"

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    253. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by YttriumOxide · · Score: 1

      And let's take your other example. Lets say we could change sexual orientation. 99%+ of the population wouldn't be in the slightest bit interested, even if it were free and reversible. The 1% exception would be, again, motivated by self-loathing (think heavily closeted Fundies who view being gay as a curse).

      Not entirely true... I'm a straight man, and would be very happy to be bisexual instead. As it is, I have NO interest in men at all, which means I reject advances from them and potentially miss out on some fun. If I were interested in men as well as women, it would increase my pool of potential partners.

      So, I would happily change my sexual orientation given the chance, and it wouldn't be motivated by self-loathing at all.

      --
      My book about LSD and Self-Discovery
      Also on facebook as: DroppingAcidDaleBewan
    254. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Mikkeles · · Score: 1

      'The ethical question is, at what stage do you decide that a person is not competent to make the decision?'

      When they start attacking or disrupting others.

      --
      Great minds think alike; fools seldom differ.
    255. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Metasquares · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you also have an astigmatism which is making this difficult? My prescription is also -1.5 (spherical; i.e. no significant astigmatism) and I don't have problems seeing the screen without glasses at a comfortable distance. On the other hand, the words "can you take a look at this?" at work immediately prompt me to reach for the glasses. My vision isn't acute enough to see (10pt text on) others' screens over their shoulders.

    256. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Actually, colourblindness can be legitimately described as a unique perspective on reality. One of my high school friends is fully red colourblind (protanopia). He's in the military where his colourblindness is an asset. Most camouflage is almost useless against him due to the patterns being designed with normal colour vision in mind. He also has far better night vision than a person with normal vision would have.

      Why not just custom order some LCD computer screens missing red or blue or green, and send the image through normally? Wouldn't that accomplish the same thing?

    257. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by u38cg · · Score: 2, Informative

      Which is why you can only enter certain trades if you are colour blind. Pilots can have certain types, but must be able to recognise bright red and green. Infantry generally welcomes most types, as they are useful, as OP points out. Certain trades are disbarred entirely.

      --
      [FUCK BETA]
    258. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      Oh I'm not saying we shouldn't cure people of nasty conditions.
      I'm just making the point that just offering a choice may not give the best outcome and there may develop a tendency to normalize everyone at birth or as children with no choices given.

      When you're young almost everyone wants to be "normal".
      When you're older you sometimes value the things which make you different more.

    259. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by f3rret · · Score: 1

      Ah but it is.

      Consent or no consent, once you begin altering the human genome you are beginning to change the species at a very basic level.
      It stands to reason that anyone who suffers from a curable disorder would more likely than not be cured; therefore probably will consider the individual (themselves) before the entire species. I mentioned cosmetic surgery (or any other kind of of surgery for that matter), well your argument is relevant for that situation as you cannot inherit silicone breasts or a facelift; now once we start altering the genes of individuals you'll be altering the entire genetic linage of that person which means you will in effect be permanently altering the species.

      No matter how harmless it might seem, once we start altering the human species as a whole we need to be sure about what we are doing.

      --
      Admit nothing. Deny Everything. Make Counter-accusations.
    260. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      You make a convincing argument.
      I guess my main concern is that this could lead to the choices being taken away from people.
      Not so much that someone chooses but more that others will make the choices for them before they can decide themselves.

    261. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Necron69 · · Score: 1

      YES!! I AM colorblind, and I would most definitely like to be cured. Where do I sign up??

      Necron69

    262. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      There is serious debate in the deaf community (which really is its own distinct sub-culture) about whether deaf children should be given cochlear implants. Some have them, and never really become full members of the deaf world -- a real bummer if your whole family is deaf. There's a really interesting documentary that you might want to Netflix... "Deaf World?" I can't recall the title.

    263. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      What he's really saying is he cannot afford to have his vision fixed so you should not be allowed to because it's not 'fair'.

    264. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      I guess I'm far more concerned that people won't get a choice.
      Some of the other replies above have been interesting- one guy who wouldn't like to be made normal but knows his parents would have jumped at it if they could.
      Another who suffered from extremely severe ADD all his life and now his son has something similar.
      His wife would jump at applying any cure to their son while he would not.

      I agree denying people a cure for the sake of society is a bad road but at the same time so is forcing cures on people before they can decide themselves.

      in any case with the colour blindness it's not much of an issue but merely a harbinger of what may be possible soon.

    265. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Caraig · · Score: 1

      For some reason I read that as 'Ernest Borgnine.'

      Yes, it's early in the morning here.

      --
      "I am an Adept of Tantric VAX."
    266. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by JWSmythe · · Score: 3, Interesting

          I agree totally. It's as morally wrong to correct colorblindness as it is to change any other aspect of a person. Does it change the person? Sure.

          I went through corrective eye surgery years ago because I had a congenital cataract (i.e., I was born with it). By the time I was 18, my vision was 20/200 in my bad eye. The fix in the early 90's was pretty simple. Cut the lens out, and put a plastic one in. The method has changed slightly since then, but it's pretty much the same. Something they didn't tell me about until after was that the natural lens filters UV light. After the surgery, the spectrum of light I was able to see was increased at the UV end of the spectrum. Black lights no longer remain almost invisible, they are bright blue to me, only in that eye. Comparing the two eyes, some things like purple flowers, are different colors in each eye. It's kind of weird, but something I've learned to live with. Did the adaptation make me "super" in some way? Not really. It's just different. Color blind people see fewer (or no) colors. I see more in one eye. It was an elective surgery. If I hadn't had it done, I would be blind in that eye by now.

          Is it any worse for me to have my vision corrected so I wouldn't be blind? Is it wrong for someone who is missing a limb to get a prosthetic limb?

          I have a friend who was in an accident and has no control over her legs. She's making progress towards walking again in the future. Should she just accept the fact that she can't walk, and not try to be "normalized" (as TFA said)? If the ability is there, and the patient wants it, let them have it.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    267. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 1

      Excuse me, did you say "laser cannons"? Why aren't we in the operating room right now?

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    268. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      I saw something on TV about deaf families who wanted to screen embryos because they didn't want hearing children.

      I can understand how having a disability can form part of someone's identity, but isn't that going a bit far?

      When I see amputees running marathons or climbing mountains I'm impressed by their determination and spirit, but I'm sure if a fairy godmother offered to restore their legs very few would tell her to stick her wand where the sun doesn't shine.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    269. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by arndawg · · Score: 1

      Because if they can't see red, they can't see our pimples. That's why!

    270. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      If it is an asset, more valuable than normal sight then they could in the same way remove red from soldier's visions (or give more colours, 4~5 would likely have the same camo killing effect). People would go both directions. Of course, if this were true they could be using tinted glasses RIGHT NOW to the exact same effect. Which kind of shows that being partially blind isn't an asset, sorry.

      Functioning autism is a little different. I don't think as we are right now many people would choose to change their brain so radically. And that could effectively end a group that has a unique advantage. It may be that it genuinely isn't worth the tradeoff. But perhaps it will just be that we are too short sighted. Especially with autistics going through an early very difficult period.

    271. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by LanMan04 · · Score: 1

      Actually, colourblindness can be legitimately described as a unique perspective on reality.

      Yeah, so is being blind, or having only 1 eye, or being deaf, or having glaucoma, or a zillion other things.

      --
      With the first link, the chain is forged.
    272. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by budgenator · · Score: 1

      How about a shot that lets you realize there is no God and therefore no reason to become a suicide bomber and we can cure you of that pesky Negroism while we're at it too?
      Curing color-blindness is pretty much a no-brainer, where it logically leads is YMMV territory. You you like a shot that lets you play nice with your school-mates or continue to be a miserable, picked on loner that hates school and grows up to be a lowly patent clerk who then reinvents the science of physics, oh yeah your parents get to decide because your only 7 years old.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    273. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Pentium100 · · Score: 1

      People with color blindness cannot do some things that others can (for example, be commercial pilots) and the color blindness does not give a big advantage over "normals". Yes, IIRC color blindness allows a person to see trough normal camouflage (I suppose a camouflage that works on both "normal" and color blind people could be made though).

      Parents forcing a cure on a child can be just as bad in some cases

      I don't think this is the case.

    274. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by 517714 · · Score: 1
      As one of those affected (afflicted?) by colorblindness I would be interested in the cure. It is a disability. I was prevented from becoming a military pilot, submariner and numerous other careers. I can't play numerous video games because I can't distinguish the colors of the playing pieces. I can't paint, though I have good technique and if you saw my work in a black and picture you might think I was not too bad. I can't sew because contrasting stitching - like green on tan or orange on brown are not considered fashionable. My selection of food is limited - I know everyone has trouble going through buffet lines figuring out what things are, but have you ever selected mashed turnips thinking they were potatoes? How about not being able to say "What a beautiful baby girl!" to someone because you can't tell if the child is wearing pink or blue? OK here's one that will get the sympathy of /.ers - imagine that you never new that Bruce Banner turned green when he turned into the Incredible Hulk? I just assumed Lou Ferigno had an iodine tan that was popular among body builders, I found this out only a few years ago. Spock was pale, Klingons were dark, but color ??

      I wouldn't go for Lasik but you can sign me up for this!

      --
      The US government have made it clear that we have no inalienable rights; any we do not defend vigorously will be taken.
    275. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by WNight · · Score: 1

      That assumes society is something though, other than just a collection of individuals. Any valid state is self-assembled by its citizens, anything else is a slave state.

      Otherwise you've got the Chinese government message: "The state is a living entity and has absolute priority over its parts."

      The only time society has any reasonable say is before the person themselves does (childhood) - my neighbor can do whatever he wants for himself but not necessarily to his kids.

    276. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by nschubach · · Score: 1

      Then we are all screwed... those things can be very vicious.

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    277. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by calyphus · · Score: 1

      Excellent point. While those of us with nominal color vision consider those who cannot see the world reflected with the equivalent contrasts and delineation as color-"blind," that term does have a built-in prejudice. Rather than classifying the lack of nominal perception as blindness, these conditions might be better understood and accepted if the possible enhancements afforded these differing perceivers have were noted instead. However, to the question of the morality of treating, or changing their visual perception to a more nominal state, let the individual choose. They know better than nominal viewers how they can and cannot compensate. The only fault with that decision is that it's likely not going to be a fully informed choice.

      --


      The potato it is uninformed.
    278. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by OldSoldier · · Score: 1

      "Would you like to be cured?"

      Problem solved.

      Exactly... I understand the general point, but this is a lousy example to showcase it. Better, because there's actually a "vocal" group devoted it, are deaf people and cochlear implants. "Fixing" deaf people is seen as a cultural change there... they lose a language (sign) and etc.

      Regarding color blindness in particular though... I understand birds have a much richer palette of colors they can see than we do. While I wouldn't sign up to be a beta tester for THAT mod... I'd be interested in that enhancement after it's perfected.

    279. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by OldSoldier · · Score: 1

      I think Arthur C Clark touched on this in one of his books.

      If you have the ability to "correct" aberrations could there be fallout?
      If you could "fix" high functioning autistic so that they could be completely normal what kind of effect might that have on scientific fields which attract such people?

      Your example is one where there's pros and cons with the "aberration" (and I happen to agree with you in that case) but where's the pro for color blindness?

      Would you rather be smart and nerdy or normal and friendly? That's a choice worth discussing.
      Would you rather be color blind and ??? or normal? Not seeing the upside here.

    280. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by mad_minstrel · · Score: 1

      Nope, no astigmatism here either. I work at 96 dpi viewed from about 1.5m (5 feet if you prefer) away. How close to your screen are you?

      --
      May the source be with you.
    281. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Yeah ... but color blindness? ........Is there any advantage to color blindness at all?

      Yep. The color receptor density is lower and the light-dark receptor density is higher. The more profoundly color-blind, the more profoundly light sensitive you become. It's like built-in night vision goggles. Ever walk around without a flashlight on a full moon night? A profoundly color-blind person can see this well with almost any moonlight.

      Pattern recognition is also more developed in most color-blind people, due the necessity to compensate for communication with non-color-blind people. Ever play find the X differences in these pictures with a color-blind person? They'll find more differences, faster than a non-color-blind person, guaranteed.

    282. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Twinbee · · Score: 1

      Those items are more like clothes. When we start to envisage visible plastic come out of our faces, that's a big turn off for pretty much most people. Even invisible micro-sized things connected to our neural pathways would creep most people out.

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    283. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Terrasque · · Score: 1

      You don't say? That's very interesting indeed.

      *Starts marketing special sunglasses to the army*

      --
      It's The Golden Rule: "He who has the gold makes the rules."
    284. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      Isn't UV entering your inner eye (past the lens) harmful? UV cause cancer, right?

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    285. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by omfgnosis · · Score: 1

      It's not normal where I live.

    286. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by omfgnosis · · Score: 1

      Suppose there were professions that depended on perception of the light spectrum exceeding that which is invisible to the "normal" subset of the population. Would those of us who only perceive the "normal" range of the light spectrum have an "ailment" that requires a "cure", and would it be "cruel" or "harsh" to withhold that "cure"?

      In other words, when circumventing a person's natural genetic or physical limitations becomes the moral default, where does that reasonably end?

      We have means to circumvent people's natural inaptitudes in many professions, but they're not universally good and are often harmful or otherwise regarded as immoral. For instance, steroids can be used to help a relatively poor athlete perform on par with naturally talented professionals.

      More to the point, it's easy to conceive how this could irreparably alter a person's potential impact in the world for the worse. It's not hard to imagine that, had Helen Keller been "cured" of deafness and blindness as an infant, many of her beliefs and hence her impact on the world would have been quite different. I really don't think the world would have been better off if she had been an electrical engineer, and I really doubt she would have chosen that for herself.

      This question is wrongly presented as a choice for those "suffering" these physical and genetic limitations, but it would be anything but. The choice would inevitably be made by parents of newborns, and by society at large in terms of expectations of parental responsibility. With that in mind, it's worth understanding that the choice's consequences aren't clearly one-sided, and that the moral implications are much broader than whether or not a person can choose to identify red and green wires.

    287. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Sarius64 · · Score: 1

      But the fact remains that color blindness is a disability, even though it is a lesser disability than most.

      You're an idiot. When someone registers statistically perfect scores on entrance exams and is then told that due to colorblindness they can only work in data entry, it is a disability. When someone is completely removed from any opportunity in biology or area research, it is a disability. We don't all aspire to be hip-hop thugs.

    288. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by thrawn_aj · · Score: 1

      Thank you. I really mean that. Discussions on /. are marked primarily by their lack of catharsis so this is a pleasant change :)

      But yes, I do agree that your concern is very well founded. Especially (as another poster touched on in his post), when it comes to parents making medical decisions for their children. It really is Russian roulette for them isn't it? Who knows how their progeny will react later in their lives to this early intervention on their part. Gratitude or anger? *sigh* It's never easy is it?

    289. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by snowgirl · · Score: 1

      Parents forcing a cure on a child can be just as bad in some cases

      I don't think this is the case.

      Again, there are well accepted medical procedures that parents cannot consent for on behalf of their child.

      These procedures obviously exclude things that are life-threatening, but are more cosmetic. For instance, a parent cannot consent to a boob job on behalf of their child. And since the child cannot consent to anything on their own until about 16~18 (depends on the procedure) they cannot get it.

      Another example of something that a parent cannot consent to on behalf of a child is an abortion... unless it is life-threatening. And at 16-18 years (depending on the state), not at all, unless the patient cannot give consent themselves (in which case, the parent is a medical proxy.)

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
    290. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Zemran · · Score: 1

      I 'CAN' see colour. Maybe you find it hard to understand but I thought that I had explained. I still have the cones in my eyes and they see the same colour that you see. When I get to a red light, just like you, I see a red light. I see the same colours, exactly the same as you see them. Unless you write in coloured dots on a background of coloured dots, I will not have any problem. I have yet to find this a problem but I often gain from the advantages.

      --
      I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
    291. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Zemran · · Score: 1

      I can see orange and I can see green, just the same as you do. I do not have any problem until you write with one colour on top of the other. Although I can still, quite clearly, see the two colours, I have trouble reading the writing. The colours blur into each other. It is not a problem that I have ever had in a real life situation. The two colours have to be of the same shade to create a problem or I can read the writing by the contrast. If I had not found out that I am colourblind, during a medical, I would never have experimented with such things and would not have known that I had any loss at all.

      In real life, the advantages of the extra night vision do get noticed. Therefore I am at an advantage.

      --
      I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
    292. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Zemran · · Score: 1

      ??? Only by sadistic eye doctors. No one else could ever know.

      --
      I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
    293. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by kmac06 · · Score: 1

      Cool! (Not that you had this problem, but that you can see UV light.) I wish I could see UV...working with high-power UV lasers always makes me a bit nervous because I never know if I accidentally took a shot in the eye (which can, incidentally, cause cataracts). With a visible laser you can obviously see it, even with an IR laser you at least know when you develop a small blind spot haha...but take a shot with a UV laser and you wouldn't know it, you'd just end up getting cataracts earlier than you otherwise would.

    294. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by mysidia · · Score: 1

      Are you getting a $1 for each of your posts suggesting colorblind people should be forced to stay that way to suffer, just to achieve someone's idealogical goal of "diversity" and de-normalization of the human experience, because the disability of colorblindness might have been useful at one time for someone in one situation?

      Would you deny glasses to the severely nearsighted? Deny hearing aids to the near-deaf? Not being able to see, might give them a heightened sense of sound. The deaf might have an advantage at certain jobs due to their acquired ability to read lips. Is either of these really justification that medical procedures to fix problems causing the affliction should not be offered?

      By the way, I happen to believe in this concept called free will, which is both a natural and sacred right that all humans have.

      An implication of free will, is that it is immoral to try to deny or take choices away from other people, in regards to what they do to themselves, for the sole reason that you think it is a bad choice to make, particularly when a rational person is likely to choose it, given the option.

      Saying we shouldn't develop and offer the procedure to people with color blindness is an immoral attempt to deny people a choice that is rational to make from their own free will.

    295. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by biryokumaru · · Score: 1

      Okay, here's the problem:

      I thought you wanted everyone to have the procedure, without asking.

      You thought I wanted no one to have it, without asking.

      Here's the reality:

      We both completely agree with one another. People should make their own choices.

      Isn't that handy?

      --
      When you're afraid to download music illegally in your own home, then the terrorists have won!
    296. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      I believe that letting people suffer when you can help them is the essence of cruelty. I also believe that when you let a person live in ignorance then you have a Human Predator. Which is why I would make a poor Salesmen, Stock Broker, or Banker.

    297. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by w0mprat · · Score: 1

      Hell no. Seriously who would want that?

      Needs infrared *at least*

      I'd be interested in the model with Terahertz spectrum imaging (see through clothes, heh heh heh)

      --
      After logging in slashdot still does not take you back to the page you were on. It's been that way for 20 years.
    298. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by compro01 · · Score: 1

      European? I'm Canadian.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    299. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by baubo · · Score: 1

      There's Through Deaf Eyes, if that's the video you're referring to. The problem with the deaf community is its sheer diversity. You have deaf people who have been deaf from birth and have never heard English. You have deaf folks who lost their hearing in childhood; you have folks with age-related hearing loss. There are deaf people who rely on sign language and deaf people who don't understand it all. My son has been profoundly deaf from birth and even if they were able to completely restore his hearing (not possible - cochlear implants contain fewer than 30 electrodes that stimulate a tiny portion of the 30,000 nerve fibers in the cochlea), there is little to no chance that (he's 20) his brain would be trained at this late date to make sense of the neural inputs (translate it into language). Deafness is not really analogous in this argument.

    300. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Vastad · · Score: 1

      I'm not colour-blind at all. Just bog-standard male-pattern trichromacy.
      But I wouldn't mind getting gene therapy which would introduce female-pattern tetrachromacy.

      Preferably with the extra chromacy granting sensitivity to infrared. Superior nightvision, perhaps even a slight heat sense.

      However UV and IR vision both, would make things we take for granted like flowers and all kinds of monitors and screens would all be perceived differently. If you're a dedicated photoshop user, then you've just screwed yourself because the Pantone range will not be what your average client perceives.

      Hmmm...I wonder if you'd actually see the remote controls IR beam flashing around if you had IR vision....

    301. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by wtbname · · Score: 1

      Ahh, Canadian!

      We can cure that out of you in a mere 20 weeks!

      But is it ethical? Who knows...

    302. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by serialband · · Score: 1

      Gataca

    303. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

          Well, I've always been sensitive to bright sunlight. Coincidentally, I live in one of the areas of the US farthest south with the cleanest air. My car has tinted windows, and I keep sunglasses handy. On particularly bright days, I wear a hat too, to shade my eyes more. That wasn't really related to the surgery, I was that way before it.

          After the surgery, black lights caused me serious pain. I'd simply have to close the eye that had surgery done, which made me look really funny. :) It's the visual equivalent of hearing two tones simultaneously, slightly off from each other, and hearing the warble, except it's not a flicker.

          It took a few years before I could look at areas illuminated by black lights. Still, it's very weird seeing two colors at the same time, but at least it's only way up in the violet/UV range.

          As far as causing cancer, well, the skin is sensitive to it. The inside of the eye? I'm not really sure. As far as I know, there's nothing unusual going on there. The surgery was done in 1993. So, 17 years later, it hasn't caused any problems there.

          I don't know if newer implants filter UV. According to the Wikipedia page on intraocular lenses, they do exist, but I didn't bother to search any further. I'm hoping to get some more work done sometime soon. The IOL Wiki page does mention IOL's for astigmatism, so there may be an option for proper UV filtering and correcting my vision problems. I have an astigmatism in both eyes. As it is, there is a slight fault in the current implant, where there's a very little bit of trapped air. A warm compress on my face will cause that eye to fog. *THAT* is weirder than just seeing beyond the normal spectrum of light. :)

          Having an IOL for astigmatism brings us back to the original question. Is it appropriate to medically adjust a person to make them more "normal"? We're already doing it so many ways that the proposed treatment isn't all that different.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    304. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

          I'm not all that sure how far into UV I can see. I don't suspect it's all that far, but I could be wrong. I'm not going to stare into a laser to find out though. :)

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    305. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by akayani · · Score: 1

      Do they come in a Blue?

    306. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by saderball · · Score: 1

      TOTALLY AGREE! This "dilemna" is pure mushy-headedness! This logic remimds me of the agnostic, dyslexic with insomnia who lays awake all night wondering if there IS a dog?

    307. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by MartinSchou · · Score: 1

      Short-sightedness can also be viewed as unique perspective on reality.

      And there are stories of people in Africa who, upon being given their first pair of glasses, were astonished to find out that there were mountains nearby. That's a fairly unique perspective on reality.

    308. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by FreeFull · · Score: 1

      The question is, will this change once the colour-blind person gains ability to see the additional colour? Would it be ethical to use the "cure" in babies, or should you let the colour-blind person grow up and then make the choice?

      --
      No ascii art.
    309. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      What this post needs is a car analogy.

      So lets say my car has an electrical fault so the headlights wont come on. The evil government nazis don't like my light deficient car and are trying to force me to get it fixed, but I just think my car is 'special' and I love it just the way it is. It's my car and I think I should have the right to say what procedures get done on it.

      Furthermore, since my car has a handicap, I want more support from the government. All streetlights in town should be brightened to compensate for my cars lack of headlights, and since I drive in the countryside at night where there are no lights, the streetlights should be extended everywhere my car regularly goes.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    310. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Metasquares · · Score: 1

      I sit about 1m away. It could just be the distance; at 1.5m things start to go fuzzy for me as well.

    311. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by sunrisesoup · · Score: 1

      But we didn't know about the colorblindness asset in WWII until the bombers with amazing results were examined and interviewed and found to have 'cheated' in some way to get around the colorblindness disqualification. We don't always know what will be an advantage and will not be. Should we change the color vision of people - if they want it and we can, within acceptable safety parameters- Certainly. Should parents make these choices for their children? They always have had to, and still must. It's our responsibility as parents to do what is best for our children to the best of our ability and resources. The key is choice. The importance is that people may be more accepting of a wider range of differences, recognizing that there are hidden strengths. It is a lesson we have been putting into childrens' educational programming for decades, but is often overridden by local culture. I am extremely nearsighted and light sensitive. I have not had surgery to fix my nearsightedness because I make use of and enjoy the ability to see at what is approx a 20x magnification with one eye when I remove my glasses.

    312. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Xest · · Score: 1

      I presume because in this case it's a genetic trait, and if we eliminate genetic traits from the gene pool then we're messing with evolution.

      My gut instinct is to agree with you though, that this probably isn't too big a deal right now. I suppose the question is whether we cure every genetic "defect" though. What if a new disease comes along that spreads easily, and causes blindness, but doesn't effect those who are colour blind for example? I suppose this is the general line of thinking they're trying to get at.

      So whilst I disagree in this particular case with them that it matters at all because I believe the likelihood of it being a problem is pretty much negligible, I think the debate is worth having in the case of "curing" genetic differences in the first place.

    313. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by thetruemelissa · · Score: 1
      Colorblindness doesn't mean that all red and all green look identical. The gray value can still vary, and usually does.

      Someone else posted that he can only tell the difference between red and green traffic lights by their position on the top or bottom. I have trouble believing this, since they're clearly distinguishable even in black-and-white movies by their different saturations. If red and green control lights aren't similarly distinguished, they ought to be.

      "Just ask the patient" doesn't work well in practice, because it's the parents of a colorblind child who will usually make the decision. In this respect it *is* much like a hypothetical cure for Asperger's--NT parents often want to cure their child's PDD brain, but most adults with Asperger's say they wouldn't take a cure if it were available. If a cure existed and parents used it during childhood, the eventual adult would no longer have the option of choosing. Should parents make that decision, when the most common case is for parents to want something that the eventual adult won't want?

      My son is only seven, so a military career has not yet come up as an option, but he's unbelievable at Where's Waldo. It takes him less than thirty seconds, usually more like ten, because the Waldo camouflage just doesn't work on him.

      I asked him if he'd be interested in seeing colors as everyone else does. His response was to get out a Where's Waldo book and begin laughing at my difficulty. I'm taking that as a no.

    314. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by tbuskey · · Score: 1

      I have red-green color-blindness, like 20%(?) of the male population. 99% of the time I can work around it. Traffic lights have 2 keys, position and color. The colors they use look different to me.

      I have a hard time with dual color red/green LEDs. Most are light colored and I can't tell the difference. I have issues with some charts that choose light colors as well.

      I can read resistor charts, tell between wire colors and can generally do things w/o the red/green.

      But as a sysadmin/network admin, I'd *really* like the ability to tell the difference between red/green LEDs instead of having logging in to check.

    315. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      Add the ability to convert Americans fat chicks into Sweden porn stars and you got yourself a deal.

      Done. Wait, you didn't specify. Did you want them to be FEMALE porn stars? Oh, dear. It'll be about about six to eight weeks until we can fix that. Until then, try not to look at any fat chicks. Definitely try to ignore the Fat Chicks Convention right outside our offices. Well, ignore them as best you can while your eye implants turn them all into Swedish Porn Stars of the "wrong" gender.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    316. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      Is that a Phineas and Ferb reference I'm detecting. Speaking of which, Phineas and Ferb could possibly be the best "nerd/geek" cartoon on today. Two boys who pass their summer by building hugely complex structures/devices (roller coasters, time machines, spaceships, gravity nullifiers, etc). One of the boys doesn't talk much at all and the other is completely unaware of his next door neighbor's romantic advances. Of course, I... uh... only know this much because my kids love watching the show. Yeah, that's it.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    317. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

      Hmmmm... Except for one thing: darker people get sunburned, too.

    318. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Tynin · · Score: 1

      A long time ago, in a NOC far far away... we hired someone who was color blind. Since it would be discrimination to fire him for it (as HR didn't learn about it after the fact, or I'm sure they would have found some reason not to hire him) we re-programed a lot of our monitoring pages. Instead of showing a red/yellow/green light, it would show a red R, a yellow Y, or a green G for the status lights. Perhaps it wasn't the perfect fix, but the color blind co-worker was able to function just fine following the change.

    319. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by jlehtira · · Score: 1

      If treatment to correct color blindness is immoral, then so is Lasik surgery to correct nearsightedness / astigmatism. Bring that further... making glasses for people with nearsightedness would be immoral on that same basis 'normalizing' the experience indeed.

      Indeed. Nearsightedness is another quality that is a nice benefit at some tasks. I'm quite sure it's an evolutionary benefit that a part of the population is very good at seeing lice and other parasites and cleaning skin. My girlfriend has this near-microscopic vision, I'm sometimes a bit jealous..

      Adjusting vision to some other focus range is not immoral however, if not done against someone's will. If people want their color-blindedness cured, there's no moral problem.

      Grandparents are right though, that eliminating variations in color vision, sight focus range, or any other trait, comes with a cost attached. A more homogenous population is less optimal, overcoming different hardships make us stronger, variety of experiences, abilities and personalities make us more likely to find the best viewpoint in new problems.

    320. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by severoon · · Score: 1

      Of what practical effect is your friend's (anti-?) disability in the military, though? Did we win the Iraq because of his superpower or something?

      --
      but have you considered the following argument: shut up.
    321. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by MacWiz · · Score: 1

      This shouldn't be a moral question at all. Not churchy enough to have a Book/chaper/verse thing, but I recall, "If thy right eye offends thee, then pluck it out."

      So the moralist view is that God lets you reject body parts entirely. Just tweaking them a little shouldn't be a problem.

    322. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Bakkster · · Score: 1

      Short-sightedness can also be viewed as unique perspective on reality. After all, you can see at close distances where other people can't. Yet AFAIK no one has ever had any moral problems with correcting it.

      Quite an 'ironic' error, as the potential moral problems (fixing something like near-sightedness that might have benefits later) is a result of short-sightedness.

      --
      Write your representatives! Repeal the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics!
    323. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1
      I think the issue is misguided normalization. Occasionally we have efforts that appear to have an end result of producing citizens of a uniform type that are destined to be Human resource managers - nothing against HR managers mind you, but everyone cannot be one.

      A world where everyone is the same would be pretty boring, the only people disagreeing with that would likely be a few grade school teachers I know.

      And some very creative people have "problems" of normalcy - they don't fit in. But so what? Is being a great socializer the height of achievement?

      But Comparison of things like deafness and color blindness to conditions like OCD, Aspergers, Tourette's and others that may result in a highly driven and creative person are stupid.

      Unfortunately we have yet to find a way to fix stupid.

      I have yet to make some great philosophical, scientific or creative breakthrough because of my deafness or the raging tinnitus that I live with. And probably never will.

      --
      Why is this even on SlashDot?... Why is this even on Slashdot?...Why is this even on Slashdot?
    324. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by xouumalperxe · · Score: 1

      If you have the ability to "correct" aberrations could there be fallout?

      Of course there is fallout. You're just not looking for the fallout where it would be at its worst. Many genetic traits that we consider disadvantageous are not always a disadvantage at the purely medical level. Take sickle-cell disease. While it is normally a disadvantage, it offers resistance against Malaria, which is why it's comparatively common in areas where malaria was also common. In general, the perils of monocultures are well known. Making gene therapy common-place promotes a degree of homogenisation of humanity's gene pool, which is ultimately dangerous.

    325. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by pwnies · · Score: 1

      Actually I think that the first step would be induced tetrachromacy. I'd opt in for it in a heartbeat.

    326. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      Google tetrachromacy.

      (That's where it ends at the moment. If you're female.)

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    327. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by WNight · · Score: 1

      Any valid state is self-assembled by its citizens, anything else is a slave state.

      No you are wrong, as there are many possible states in between the extremes.

      You're wrong.

      It's true. Tautologically. A state that employs slavery is a slave state. You just don't like the sound of it. Fuck just one sheep...

      Society either holds the individual paramount, or not. That it chooses rarely isn't the point - that it reserves the right to do so is. It's not an issue of right or wrong, simply observable fact.

      Perhaps the best alternative [...]

      That part wasn't an argument about what was best - perhaps a slave state is, but that's still what they are.

      Perhaps you were assuming this would be restricted to only things that didn't have a high probability of harming others, but your exact statement didn't indicate this.

      That's not what I'm talking about. I'm talking about who has a legitimate issue with someone's actions, individuals not a nebulous group.

      Society doesn't exist. There's just people. When we lose sight of this we create victimless crimes.

      I'm not saying we couldn't punish a drunk driver on an empty street, just that charges should be brought in the name of all potential drivers/pedestrians, not "the state". When you can't find a victim, you don't have a crime.

      When you lose sight of who this is for you don't have a government, it has you.

    328. Re:WTF? Just ask the patient. by WNight · · Score: 1

      No you are wrong

      You're wrong.

      Read your own link!

      Sigh. I said something you thought was black and white. You claimed it was a fallacy simply because I didn't allow for a middle option. I pointed out that your reasoning is flawed, and did it with a Wikipedia link because that's apparently how you prefer to do things.

      The fallacy you linked to would only apply if my argument was something like "because some sort of compromise between the two extremes exists it must be superior than either extreme." I argued that there were more than two possibilities, even though you argued only two exist.

      It would also apply if you tried to invent an in-between state that didn't exist, such as "semi-pregnant"... decrying something for not having a middle is merely the first step to arguing to that invented middle.

      [...] that it reserves the right to do so is [the entire issue].

      Again you are trapped in a version binary thinking.

      Not at all. If someone raped someone once, they're still called a rapist. Similarly if they held one slave they'd be a slaver...

      Binary thinking would be to assume that a non-binary thing should be treated as binary (ie, variable guilt for a rape -> one-size fits all punishment). But simply to factually label someone as a rapist... no.

      In the same way that a rapist is still a rapist even if not actually being in the process of raping right now, a society that condones slavery does so, even if it doesn't currently have any slaves, as long as it reserves the right.

      That part wasn't an argument about what was best - perhaps a slave state is, but that's still what they are.

      Wow you really like the "Proof by Example" fallacy!

      Wow, you really like that word.

      A society could hold the individual paramount in some things and not others, in fact [...]

      And in doing so it would be enslaving the individual (perhaps in only narrow areas) for the good of the masses.

      Why does it hurt you to admit the facts?

      I can't even begin to understand how you link this to slavery

      Can't, or don't try? It should be very simple to see.

      If I come to you and threaten to kill you if you marry a brunette, are you not less free despite loving a redhead?

      Even if the restrictions are minor or compatible with your regular actions, they are placed upon you from above. That's slavery. Benign tyranny or not...

      Groups (nebulous or not) are made of individuals.

      How do you expect non-sarcastic replies to things like this?

      Society doesn't exist. There's just people.

      This is like arguing computer networks don't really exist

      No, I can point to cabling and switches as being distinct. I cannot point to loyalty, fealty, or rights.

      Truly, a group of people is just a group of people. You don't get more worthy at certain sizes.

      You see that is a major problem with your understanding, in a participatory government the state represents its citizens.

      No, a government owns its citizens. It represents its own interests.

      I am offered some say in some things, but I have never been asked if I accept that choice.

      Furthermore, if these individuals come together and agree that they have issue with a specific type of action, codify it law, it is about the same as many of them coming up to a person performing said action and saying "We take issue with that action..."

      In other words, in your example the state prosecuting the drunk driver is effectively the same as all potential drivers/pedestrians banding together to prosecuting the dru

  2. Who knows? by MarkvW · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Who knows what kind of mutations would best preserve human life here on Earth . . . or in Space . . . or on another planet? We're infants playing with power tools!

    1. Re:Who knows? by Twinbee · · Score: 1

      As if survival of the human race is at issue here...

      Surely there are aspects which improve quality of life which have nothing to do with mere surivial?

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    2. Re:Who knows? by nomadic · · Score: 1

      What are you, a liberal?

    3. Re:Who knows? by Snarfangel · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Who knows what kind of mutations would best preserve human life here on Earth . . . or in Space . . . or on another planet? We're infants playing with power tools!

      After a few generations of letting infants play with power tools, who knows what carpentry skills would evolve.

      --
      This tagline is copyrighted material. Please send $10 for an affordable replacement.
    4. Re:Who knows? by Rakshasa+Taisab · · Score: 1

      Speaking of us as 'infants' is just another way of saying that some all-powerful mother/father figure will come and change our diapers when we soil them.

      We're adults damn it, and can drink ourselves to death and live in a garbage-filled apartment if we want to!

      --
      - These characters were randomly selected.
    5. Re:Who knows? by girlintraining · · Score: 1

      We're infants playing with power tools!

      Don't worry. It'll just make the Darwin Awards more interesting...

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    6. Re:Who knows? by pitchpipe · · Score: 1

      Who knows what kind of mutations would best preserve human life here on Earth . . . or in Space . . . or on another planet? We're infants playing with power tools!

      GOD! The board game! by Milton Bradley

      Oh yeah, I'd play that game!

      --
      Look where all this talking got us, baby.
    7. Re:Who knows? by aussie_a · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If we know what normal-sighted people's DNA looks like, do we also know what colour-blind people's DNA looks like? If so, could this procedure also make someone colour-blind?

    8. Re:Who knows? by IckySplat · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Who knows what kind of mutations would best preserve human life here on Earth . . . or in Space . . . or on another planet? We're infants playing with power tools!

      You say that like it's a bad thing!

      --
      Help! help!, the termites are eating my DRAM!!!
    9. Re:Who knows? by supertrinko · · Score: 1

      Mere survival? I think the millions of years of evolution that occurred for our survival would be quite offended at that. Survival, it's extremely important.

      --
      If it rhymes it must be true.
    10. Re:Who knows? by CharlyFoxtrot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Who knows what kind of mutations would best preserve human life here on Earth . . . or in Space . . . or on another planet? We're infants playing with power tools!

      Or maybe that genetic defect was the one that in time was going to mutate the human race into the super advanced but immoral homo superior that would have exterminated us all and they just unwittingly saved the species ! Or maybe our engaging in random speculation isn't helping the argument and you should stop reading sci-fi and chill out ;-)

      --
      If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error.
    11. Re:Who knows? by Sky+Cry · · Score: 1

      Evolution got us this far and is certainly a powerful tool, but it's *slow*. It's finally time humans took their future into their own hands.

    12. Re:Who knows? by Twinbee · · Score: 1

      It *was* extremely important.

      Now it matters a lot more if everyone's happy, and can live in an aesthetically and socially pleasing enviroment.

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
  3. cb or CB? by Velox_SwiftFox · · Score: 2, Funny

    Are we talking about curing the lower case color blind or the upper case Color Blind?

    1. Re:cb or CB? by digitalchinky · · Score: 3, Funny

      We should be talking about curing my non-existent sense of smell too :-(

      At least with color blindness people go "oh, how many fingers am I holding up?", but you tell someone you have no sense of smell, they go off and consume the most vile crap they can find just to let rip with a dirty sloppy arsed fart in the interests of testing the aforementioned anosmia. Now don't get me wrong, the entire planet smells exactly the same to me no matter my location, but farting on me...

    2. Re:cb or CB? by nacturation · · Score: 1

      CB? i'M soRrY, buT I'M Caps BlinD.

      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
  4. As as light colorblind... by Extremus · · Score: 1

    ... all I can say is that, apart from caption in maps and clothes, everything is fine. It is also a very good topic to start a conversation at the bar table: "sure you are colorblind?! What color is this?" Sundenly I become the center of the attention and I like it like that! Stay away from my genes!

    1. Re:As as light colorblind... by MechaShiva · · Score: 5, Funny

      It's not all puppies and kittens. When I asked my wife for my gray towel, she looked at me quite puzzled. It was shortly thereafter that the mystery of why her husband was using a purple towel was solved.

      --
      After calming me down with some orange slices and some fetal spooning, E.T. revealed to me his singular purpose.
    2. Re:As as light colorblind... by adonoman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      As the child of a color-blind dad, I think the worst part is getting all the various shades of brown, red and green play-dough mixed up into one nasty brown color all the time. Eventually we stopped letting him get near it. Although reflecting back, that may have just been his way of getting us to clean up ourselves....

    3. Re:As as light colorblind... by value_added · · Score: 1

      It's not all puppies and kittens.

      Speaking of which ...

      A few weeks back I bought my dog a new toy to play with (a rubber ball thingy that bounces and squeaks when squeezed/bitten). Decided I'd take the opportunity to venture out of my Command Center and spend a few hours playing with him. So off we go into the backyard.

      As a warmup, I throw the ball so it lands a few feet from him. He looks where it landed, looks at me, looks again at where it landed, then spends the next 15 minutes circling the yard trying to find it. Then it occurred to me -- a red ball, green grass, and a colourblind animal ... duh.

      He found it eventually, of course, but each time I threw it, he'd circle the yard nose to the ground before finding it.. Poor guy must have thought I brought home a magic ball.

    4. Re:As as light colorblind... by CharlyFoxtrot · · Score: 2, Funny

      It's not all puppies and kittens. When I asked my wife for my gray towel, she looked at me quite puzzled. It was shortly thereafter that the mystery of why her husband was using a purple towel was solved.

      That's like the time I found out my brown pants are actually a shade of green. I knew I was a little colorblind but still. And who the fuck wears green pants (except for me apparently) ?

      --
      If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error.
    5. Re:As as light colorblind... by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      I bought myself green glasses (my favorite color), which apparently turned out to be brown. I hate brown damn it!

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    6. Re:As as light colorblind... by Rufty · · Score: 1

      I bought brown Levis from an end of line store. Wore them for the evening out. Turns out the reason they were cheap is there isn't much call for jeans my size in pink...

      --
      Red to red, black to black. Switch it on, but stand well back.
    7. Re:As as light colorblind... by Nyeerrmm · · Score: 1

      The thing that gets me the most (I'm severely red-green colorblind) is the inability to determine when meat is done cooking. If I'm cooking for others, I often ask "Am I going to poison us?" and if I'm cooking for myself I usually overcook it.

      A few other items that are amusing in hindsight:
      - I bought a pink flashlight camping on spring break a few years ago
      - According to my girlfriend, I have quite a few pieces of clothing with light red stains on them
      - Settlers of Catan is a difficult game to play - sheep and grain have to be distinguished based on texture not color
      - Older board games with poor color choices (my copy of Diplomacy stands out) leads to confusion.

      These are of course in addition to the more serious (potentially professionally and personally hazardous) concerns of reading maps and charts, setting color schemes for websites, being able to pick clothes that actually match, and distinguishing dim green lights on horizontal stoplights.

      Not to say that any of these things seriously hinder quality of life, and can be corrected with a little bit of thinking ahead -- still very inconvenient. Of course, one nice thing is the ability to purchase monitors that don't show red. I've picked up quite a few for less than $10 and I can't tell the difference.

    8. Re:As as light colorblind... by davidwr · · Score: 1

      From parent post:

      Where'd he find it? In the cat's litter box?

      From great-grandparent post:

      It's not all puppies and kittens

      I guess sometimes it is.

      --
      Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    9. Re:As as light colorblind... by davidwr · · Score: 1

      I've picked up quite a few [monitors] for less than $10

      If this was in the last year or so and it was a CRT you way overpaid. Around here you can get a working 3-color CRT monitor practically for free on Craigslist.

      Now, as for picking up a cheap LCD monitor with a few broken red pixels or a laptop with a bad connection that only affects the red, for that you have an advantage over the rest of us.

      --
      Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    10. Re:As as light colorblind... by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      I bought myself green glasses (my favorite color), which apparently turned out to be brown. I hate brown damn it!

      I... but... how... *bzzt* ERROR: DOES NOT COMPUTE.

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    11. Re:As as light colorblind... by anss123 · · Score: 1

      Brilliant, I will have to try this.

  5. Tetrachromat by eightball · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I am waiting for the tetrachromat patch. So, I think you can assume my position.

  6. i think it would be morally wrong by FudRucker · · Score: 2, Insightful

    i think it would be morally wrong to have the ability to cure the colorblind (or any other disability or disease) but not do it out of some delusional religious belief.

    --
    Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
    1. Re:i think it would be morally wrong by Sparx139 · · Score: 1

      Agreed. It's only morally wrong if it's forced on the patient.

      --
      Our culture doesn't get smarter, it just finds new ways of being retarded.
  7. Sure why not by cheesybagel · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Plus infrared and ultraviolet.

    1. Re:Sure why not by BetterSense · · Score: 1

      I'd like to be able to see magic. I hear it's sort of a purplish color.

    2. Re:Sure why not by FridayBob · · Score: 1

      For a moment, I thought the same, but then I remembered reading somewhere that insects can only see ultraviolet the way they do because the light-sensitive cells of their compound eyes are so close to the surface. In the case of the mammalian eye, however, evolution has caused the lens to become opaque to most frequencies of ultraviolet light to avoid damage to the retina. So, even if the retina was sensitive more of the UV range, it would still not be able to detect it.

      As for the possibility of seeing infrared light, if it were ever to become an option I'm not so sure that I would want to see too much of that range either. For example, it might be interesting to be able to detect objects and other living things by differences in temperature the way a pit viper does, but that would also have serious drawbacks. For example, a hot frying pan might become too painful too look at, and you'd also have to get used to falling asleep with the lights on, so to speak: after closing your eyes, you'd still see the light (the heat) from the inside of your own eyelids!

      It's more likely though, IMO, that we will never be able to see infrared directly with our eyes. Snakes, for example, have evolved several different methods of detecting warm-blooded prey (parallel evolution), but those solutions all involve heat-sensitive patches of skin or scales (on, or between the labial scales of many boas and pythons, and of course the famous pit organ) -- it never involved the eyes. Other animals that see better than we do at night make use of a layer behind the retina, called the tapetum lucidum, that reflects light that has managed to pass undetected through the retina back out again, thus increasing the chances of it being detected on the second pass. For those who would be willing to pay for it, this might be a more interesting feature to add to the human eye, but it still would not help to detect infrared light.

    3. Re:Sure why not by Rocketship+Underpant · · Score: 2, Informative

      Humans can already see some ultraviolet. The only problem is that our lenses filter out the UV part of the spectrum. In WW2, however, elderly people who had had cataract surgery were used to read UV signal lights that normal people would not be able to see.

      --
      He who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me.
  8. I think I'll pass on this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I am color blind. It doesn't really cause me any problems other than a small number of awkward social situations where I can't observe something that is obvious to a room full of people. That and I can't see the numbers in the dot tests.

    But that actually sounds really freaky, a virus that can change my perception of colors. I've lived my whole life with color blindness and I have to wonder what it would be like to "cure" it suddenly. Who knows? Maybe I associate a given thing with a given color, and seeing it differently would be freaky or just not right, like waking up one morning to learn that ketchup is really green.

    If you came to me and said, I can give you something that'd cure your color blindness, I think I'd be inclined to say no. Life has been all right up to now without that "cure".

    1. Re:I think I'll pass on this. by sonicmerlin · · Score: 3, Funny

      Lol. Green ketchup. Silly color-blind AC, ketchup is blue.

    2. Re:I think I'll pass on this. by GaryOlson · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I have the same color blindness; and I don't see it as a defect. When inspecting a collection of machined parts, I could unerringly spot the defective parts visually. The defects were as small as .0015". I attribute this acuity to not being distracted by colors I can't see. My ability to discern form in greyscale is also much higher than almost everyone else I know. But don't ask me to look for numbers in the dots.

      --
      Every mans' island needs an ocean; choose your ocean carefully.
    3. Re:I think I'll pass on this. by nintendoeats · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, I like painting miniatures and video games. Both get alot harder when you can't discern between red, green and yellow properly.

    4. Re:I think I'll pass on this. by maxwells_deamon · · Score: 1

      When I was in 10th grade we collected pond water samples. the next day we took samples of the water and put them under a microscope.

      I asked the teacher if I could have a slide with a slight well in it. Because I was a nerd he loaned me one.

      I prepared my slide and showed him what I had found. There were a few fresh water hydra on the sides of the collection jars. They are tiny animals about 30 cells total. I could pick them off the walls with a pipette and put them on the slide.

      He asked me how i found it. I told him that I could see them and wanted to see it closer. I do not think he belived me.

      It wasn't till years later that I realized that they could not see it at all except perhaps as a dot. I could see the arms with unaided eyes

      I am severly nearsighted and Color Blind
       

    5. Re:I think I'll pass on this. by carolfromoz · · Score: 1

      In the Vietnam war colour blind soldiers were in demand for spotting the vietcong from helicopters. The weren't distracted by all the jungle green.

      An old friend of my mother's had this job

    6. Re:I think I'll pass on this. by Pentium100 · · Score: 1

      ...like waking up one morning to learn that ketchup is really green.

      I saw green ketchup in the store one time. I think Heinz makes it.

    7. Re:I think I'll pass on this. by snowgirl · · Score: 1

      I remember when I was in high school and my brother told me that they used to use color blind people to spot the tanks in the world war because they were immune to color camouflage. I remember being totally surprised because at the time I thought they just painted the tanks that way to make them stand out more so people would see the tanks coming and run in fear! Honestly, you couldn't make it stand out more if you painted it yellow with big black polka dots. You can color it any way you want, it will always look the same... like a tank.

      Look into Razzle Dazzle as a camouflage for boats in World War 1. You perhaps won't be able to appreciate much of the colors, but we painted boats crazy colors at weird angles to mess with people with color vision, because they could not appropriately account for the different shapes produced by the colors.

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
    8. Re:I think I'll pass on this. by scrib · · Score: 1

      Thanks for making that point. I looked up information on rods and cones. Apparently cones are responsible for high-resolution vision (near the center of your visual field) AND for color vision. The site I found says that for the cones, 64% are red, 32% are green, and 2% are blue. The cones in a color blind person still work, they just aren't divided into red or green cones. You give up color perception in favor of higher visual acuity.

      It would be interesting if this was something that was reversible. If someone could "try out" color vision, or color blindness for that matter, and choose to keep it or not. It's much less of a difficult question if you can just go back to the way you were. But I dream...

      --
      Help! Help! I'm being repressed!
    9. Re:I think I'll pass on this. by snowgirl · · Score: 1

      So, I found some color paintings of these. You do realize these boats look weird and confusing to color blind people, too, right?

      It's not that we can't see colors. We just see them differently.

      Oh, I know you can see them, and that they look weird and confusing to you as well.

      I never said that it wouldn't make it look weird and confusing either. I said: "You perhaps won't be able to appreciate much of the colors".

      I'm not color-blind, and did not want to make any definitive statements about if you would or could.

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
    10. Re:I think I'll pass on this. by snowgirl · · Score: 1

      I looked at the Wikipedia article. It said that the goal wasn't to conceal the existence of a ship, but to obscure what direction it was going in and where the mast was. I think this trick would probably work equally well regardless of whether or not the observer is color blind.

      I would think camouflage worked for colorblind as well, but apparently my gut feelings are wrong...

      So, I didn't want to make assumptions.

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
  9. What the... I don't even... by epp_b · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What kind of stupid, half-witted, pseudo-concern is this? This is the same as asking if a cure for cancer is morally wrong; after all, it, too, is [ultimately] due to faulty genetics.

    1. Re:What the... I don't even... by amasiancrasian · · Score: 1

      Exactly! There is also the "moral" question on whether or not doctors should treat diabetes or any genetic condition, because essentially what "survival of the fittest" would normally take care of is being artificially perpetuated by human beings. I personally think that's a load of BS, but the argument is valid. But that's what differentiates humans from animals is that the "survival of the fittest" also includes using your head.

    2. Re:What the... I don't even... by Brett+Buck · · Score: 1

      What kind of stupid, half-witted, pseudo-concern is this? This is the same as asking if a cure for cancer is morally wrong;

                  Welcome to slashdot!

                Seriously, there are those who consider a lot of what are generally considered defects/handicaps/etc "communities" that should be preserved. Deafness, for instance, autism as another. I think it's asinine but it's on-point to the question.

    3. Re:What the... I don't even... by RuiFerreira · · Score: 1

      Agreed. Theory of evolution is a descriptive theory. Anything is selection of the fittest as long the traits survive. Otherwise it's called discrimination. Theory of evolution has nothing to do with decisions we make because it always applies, no matter what. One could be against adoption because "it's against selection of the fittest". But we evolved to be (some say) a society conscious animal. Another example. One can be against transgenic food because it reduces biodiversity. But indestructible rice has clearly some evolutionary advantages. Until the day (in 1 century, say) a bug appears and we have no more rice. Anyway, like you say, our reasoning about all this stuff is part of the evolutionary process. The only thing I think we should be aware is than on this kind of stuff, the precautionary principle is more applicable than our usual "innocent until proven guilty principle". The precautionary principle says "If something you're doing can have a irreversible impact, it should be proven safe first". We already apply this to pharmaceuticals, and many other things but we should be more aware of it, because in a way, is counter intuitive for us, democratic people. Who cares if it's debatable if there is global warming? Just because that there is the risk of it, we must take action to prevent its possibility. This ruins 99.9% of the arguments of GW deniers and conspiracy theorists. Because they think GW should be proven, whereas the only thing to be proven is the mere possibility of it.

    4. Re:What the... I don't even... by Lloyd_Bryant · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Seriously, there are those who consider a lot of what are generally considered defects/handicaps/etc "communities" that should be preserved. Deafness, for instance, autism as another. I think it's asinine but it's on-point to the question.

      Don't let the "community" crap fool you - it's mainly politics. The larger a special interest group is, the more political influence it can assert. The more influence it can assert, the more goodies it can divert to its members.

      --
      Don't tell me to get a life. I had one once. It sucked.
    5. Re:What the... I don't even... by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      well, a ton of folks aren't even aware they're colorblind (I didn't learn until a few years ago when I went for a pilot's medical---apparently I can't fly at night). With cancer, there's a huge down side... with color-blindness, most folks can live their whole live and besides for (allegedly) mismatched clothing colors, never realize anything is wrong.

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    6. Re:What the... I don't even... by magus_melchior · · Score: 1

      A "what if someone did find a cure for cancer" drama aired recently on the Japanese cable/satellite network called Pandora. If something so valuable and industry-altering a cure was discovered, there will be no shortage of politicians and faculty who will try to use it for personal gain, nor will there be a shortage of corporations who wish to maximize its sale while minimizing the royalties and labor. Other references to opening the Pandora's Box of fixing "faults" that make us human as much as our intellect does include Gundam SEED* and the Eugenics Wars/Augments theme in the Star Trek franchise. Admittedly these are works of fiction that flesh out the discussion by taking the consequences to their extremes, but it demonstrates that a society where genetically superior humans become a sort of oppressive "master race" is not at all hard to imagine.

      Put simply, if we are to venture into improving our genetic selves in ways other than natural selection, not asking the "stupid, half-witted, pseudo-concern" questions merely because the answer seems obvious at the time may be the more irresponsible of paths.

      --
      "We are Microsoft. You shall be assimilated. Competition is futile."
  10. Consenting adults by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm a consenting adult.

    If I want to put a drug into my body, it's my right. If I want to put a penis into me, it's my right. If I want to put my penis into something, it's my right.

    If I want my DNA changed, then it's my right. Anyone who says otherwise is a prohibitionist and a statist, just like people who support our government locking up consenting adults for other victimless acts.

    1. Re:Consenting adults by Chaos+Incarnate · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If I want to put my penis into something, it's my right.

      Depends on what you want to put it into—if it's another living being who doesn't/can't consent, that's not your right.

      --
      Benford's Corollary to Clarke's Law: "Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced."
    2. Re:Consenting adults by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > Depends on what you want to put it into--if it's another living being

      YMBNH.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    3. Re:Consenting adults by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      Sure.

      But what about children. Should they have the right to wait until they can make consenting decisions?

      I wouldn't mind saying "requires the subject to be over 18 years of age and consenting." I get worried about letting parents decide they want their kids to be "normal."

      Where does it end? "I want my kid to be light skinned, blue eyed, and blond. Please give him/her a virus for that!"

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    4. Re:Consenting adults by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      Now I'm imagining you offering the grandparent a lift in your car, as long as he leaves his penis outside...

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    5. Re:Consenting adults by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      You put a robot's penis inside your car every time it's low on gas. Do you ask your car its permission? No, you don't even consider your car's feelings.

    6. Re:Consenting adults by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      Don't worry baby. I can consent enough for the both of us!

      --
      You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
    7. Re:Consenting adults by MartinSchou · · Score: 1

      If I want to put a drug into my body, it's my right.

      I'm sure that'll make an interesting argument if you are arrested for having heroin, cocaine, LSD, ecstasy, magic mushrooms and various other illegal drugs on you. Even if they are only for your own consumption.

      I agree that it should be up to me to decide, what I put into my body, to the extent that it is possible, but legally that just isn't the case.

  11. The Qualia beast raises its head again by Twinbee · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When Qualia is concerned, nothing is certain. It's reasonable to produce scientific measurements of this and that. But what colours (or saturation) they *map* to inside the brain is another matter. For example, some creatures are monochromats, which means they can probably only see one colour. But what that colour actually is, is anyone's guess.

    Apparently, some people have four colour cones instead of three. Do they see a new colour competely outside our range, or just have extra 'depth' to distinguish our current range more easily?

    --
    Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    1. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by pydev · · Score: 1

      It's reasonable to produce scientific measurements of this and that. But what colours (or saturation) they *map* to inside the brain is another matter.

      That can be determined experimentally as well, both by sticking electrodes into brains, and by performing clever experiments.

      For example, some creatures are monochromats, which means they can probably only see one colour.

      No, it doesn't mean "probably", it means they can actually only see one color.

      But what that colour actually is, is anyone's guess.

      Just lower the lights until your night vision kicks in. Voila, you have monochromatic vision too.

      Apparently, some people have four colour cones instead of three. Do they see a new colour competely outside our range, or just have extra 'depth' to distinguish our current range more easily?

      That's not a question of qualia; it's easy to determine experimentally.

    2. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by spiffmastercow · · Score: 1

      I think you missed the point. There's no way to determine if, for example, you experience the color red in the same way I do. It's an epistemoligical problem.

    3. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      No, it doesn't mean "probably", it means they can actually only see one color.

      No, it means that they can probably only see one colour. You see different shades of one colour as different shades, but you can take an image that is sampled as a single colour channel and, map it into a different colour space, getting a multi-coloured image. The colours could represent different intensities, rather than different frequencies, or (given the signals sent down an optic nerve) you might see different colours at sharp intensity boundaries.

      Just lower the lights until your night vision kicks in. Voila, you have monochromatic vision too.

      Which doesn't necessarily tell you anything about how an animal that didn't evolve colour vision perceives similar signals.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    4. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by dpbsmith · · Score: 1

      There have been cases of people with trichromatic vision in one eye and dichromatic vision in the other. If I recall correctly, the other eye was deuteranopic and they perceived colors with that eye exactly as one would expect--yellow and blue hues only, but with varying amount of brightness and saturation.

      I'm not sure that really cuts the Gordian knot, though, because it's possible that the presence of a trichromatic eye might change the way the brain encodes perception with the dichromatic eye.

      By the way, what color do you perceive the part of the world that is directly behind you as being? Light? Dark? Uniform? Blurred? Or do you "simply" perceive nothing? Or the absence of nothing? :)

    5. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by eh2o · · Score: 3, Informative

      The answer is they have extra depth, actually extra spectral resolution.

      Color perception is a byproduct of the retina being stimulated with a particular spectral distribution of light. Its a spectral sampling, much like how the ear samples the spectral distribution of sound, but a totally different method and with much much lower resolution.

      We all see the same spectra, some people get more or less information than others. Mainly this manifests in differences in discrimination ability between colors as well as disagreement about what constitutes a "color match" between observers that are getting different information.

      Debating about what this maps to in the head is mostly an exercise in mental masturbation, the brain simply integrates available information in a statistically optimal fashion.

    6. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by spiffmastercow · · Score: 1

      It's a problem if you're claiming that we all experience everything in the same way, as the GP poster claimed.

    7. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by zippthorne · · Score: 2, Informative

      No, he's talking about a philosophical matter that we will never, ever be able to know. It's a thought exercise that young children often engage in to entertain themselves, although ultimately, the answer is "mu"

      Two people can agree on a color, and point to the same color by the same name, but is it internally also the same? Could someone see a world where red looks like what you see blue as? You'd call them by the same name, because you attached those names based on common experience, but does the internal "representation" have any reality?

      You can't determine it experimentally any more than you can measure what someone "hears" when they read a book. And maybe even less likely than that.

      He's trying to imagine what it would be like to see four colors instead of three, which is an exercise that is probably as difficult and meaningful as a monochrome-viewer to imagine two or three colors, or a flatlander to imagine a three-dimensional world. Ultimately, i'd guess "not only an extra color, but a whole extra bunch of combinations of colors with a more complex system of complementary colors." But I can only see the standard 3, so I can't really imagine it.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    8. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by spiffmastercow · · Score: 1

      Er, GGP. GGGP from current post

    9. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by pydev · · Score: 1

      I think you missed the point. There's no way to determine if, for example, you experience the color red in the same way I do.

      That's not Twinbee said. He talked about what "colors map to in the brain" or whether people "see a new color [...] or just have extra depth". Those can be determined experimentally.

      If you have any other meaning for the word "experience", then we can see whether we can determine that experimentally as well.

      It's an epistemoligical problem.

      It's actually not a problem at all; qualia are meaningless.

    10. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by SQL+Error · · Score: 1

      The concept of qualia being logically incoherent under any self-consistent metaphysical position, this problem doesn't worry me a whole lot.

    11. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by Lord+Ender · · Score: 1

      Um... it would be pretty easy to determine which colors are visible to people or other animals: just run through the spectrum and see if they respond.

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    12. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by Mr+Otobor · · Score: 1

      But what colours (or saturation) they *map* to inside the brain is another matter. For example, some creatures are monochromats, which means they can probably only see one colour. But what that colour actually is, is anyone's guess.

      Pfft, Arilvionn, obviously. Silly humans.

    13. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by pydev · · Score: 1

      No, it means that they can probably only see one colour.

      Color perception is defined as the ability to distinguish light of equal lightness based on wavelength alone. If you don't have that, you don't perceive colors (i.e., everything is "one color").

      Which doesn't necessarily tell you anything about how an animal that didn't evolve colour vision perceives similar signals.

      If humans and animals were just black boxes, it might not tell you a lot. But higher animals that don't have color vision mostly got that way by just using their night vision, so human night vision is a nearly perfect analog. Also, color vision is separate in the brain from other vision, so it doesn't interact much with anything else.

    14. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by pydev · · Score: 1

      No, he's talking about a philosophical matter

      I know what qualia are (supposed to be). I'm saying none of the specific points he raises are qualia because they all have good scientific answers.

      Two people can agree on a color, and point to the same color by the same name, but is it internally also the same?

      It uses the same pathways, activates the same brain areas and cells, is processed in the same way, and interacts with other perceptions in the same way. What other sense of "internal" do you want?

      You can't determine it experimentally any more than you can measure what someone "hears" when they read a book.

      That can and has been determined (it varies from person to person, depending also on skill and writing system).

      He's trying to imagine what it would be like to see four colors instead of three,

      Even that isn't so hard to experience; you can put yourself into a bichromatic environment for a while and then see what you perceive if you go into a normal environment.

      Ultimately, i'd guess "not only an extra color, but a whole extra bunch of combinations of colors

      Human beings can distinguish thousands of colors with trichromatic vision. With quadrichromatic vision, you'd probably not see any more colors; the "new colors" would mean that you lose the ability to distinguish colors that you previously could distinguish. The total number of colors you can see is a limitation of your brain size, not your eyes.

    15. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

      The answer is they have extra depth, actually extra spectral resolution.

      Color perception is a byproduct of the retina being stimulated with a particular spectral distribution of light. Its a spectral sampling, much like how the ear samples the spectral distribution of sound, but a totally different method and with much much lower resolution.

      Actually, I wouldn't be so sure about that. The colors we see do not map one-to-one with individual frequencies and amplitudes of electromagnetic radiation. For example, all of the hues between red and blue on the color wheel are, in a sense illusory; no particular frequency of light matches up to any one of them.

      The way you describe things is only true of two-color vision. One type of cone senses "warm" colors and the other senses "cool" colors, and the brain interprets a color somewhere on a linear color spectrum by comparing the relative intensities of the signals sent by each cone. But you throw in a third cone type like (most) humans have, and things get more complex. Red light triggers only one type of cone. Yellow light triggers that type and another type. Green light triggers only that second type. Cyan light triggers that type and a third type. Blue light triggers only the third type. So far all these hues, and the hues between them, correspond to particular frequencies of actual, physical, light.

      But when the red- and blue-sensitive cones, but not the green-sensitive cones, are stimulated, the brain concludes that you are seeing a color between red and blue that's not green (or any hue that's "partly green", e.g. yellow or cyan), thus forcing the color scale or spectrum to become a color wheel: two dimensional instead of three dimensional. Really, a color triangle would be a better description. Think about it mathematically: the brain assigns a light signal to a location in a color-space by way of its distance from some number of reference points. With only two reference points you can only describe points on a line; but with three reference points you can describe points on a plane.

      Thus, four-color vision likewise kicks the range of hues up another dimension, not just adding extra detail to the "scale" we (at least most of us) already aren't using, but turning our color wheel into a color sphere (or more accurately, turning out color triangle into a color tetrahedron). Let's call a four-color-sighted person's primary colors "red", "ween" (for "warm green"), "ceen" (for "cool green"), and blue. They then not only see the red-yellow-green-cyan-blue spectrum plus "red and blue but not green" magenta that we see; they in addition to dividing "green" up into "ween", "ceen", and something in between, they would also see additional "illusory" secondary colors consisting of combinations like "red and ween and blue but not ceen" and "red and ceen and blue but not ween", which we three-color-sighted folks would probably call shades of off-grey (being, to our eyes, composed of some red and green and some blue). Likewise, "red and ceen but not ween", or "ween and blue but not ceen", since the actual frequencies of light between red and ceen or ween and blue should fall in the ween and ceen ranges respectively, but their eyes are capable of sensing multi-frequency colors that trigger those patterns of cones and have to be interpreted by the brain somehow, and only a three-dimensional color model can make such a distinction.

      --
      -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
      "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
    16. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by anarche · · Score: 1

      As previous replies.

      In a cognitive linguistics unit I did at UWA the lecturer mentioned indigenous tribes who had no word for purple could not distinguish purple.

      To experiment, take a chart of 256 colours (of which only English has separate nouns) and show it to groups of people from different genetic backgrounds, then ask them to supergroup the colours. Aqua (for instance) is viewed as either green or blue or separate depending on the person.

      We can measure photonic input to retina and where that fires up the brain, but we still aren't entirely sure of the links from the input process to the memory-recognition of the colour.

      Neuroscience has a ways to go yet..

      --
      Wait! Whats a sig?
    17. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by eh2o · · Score: 2, Interesting

      No I am perfectly aware of the difference between monochromatic pure color and a synthetic color (wheel or whatever). I think my point was perhaps misunderstood...

      Consider for a moment the ear. It also has a dimensionality reduction in the translation from sound to perception. Meaning, multiple audio spectra map to the same perceived sound. MP3 famously uses this effect to hide compression artifacts. Colorimetry is the applied science of doing basically the same thing but for color mixing with different reflectance/emmission spectra.

      Now some people have better hearing than others, they can hear the MP3 artifacts when someone else can't. Shall we argue that they have an "extra" dimension of sound perception? I'd rather just say they have a more refined threshold of difference between spectra. Similarly some people have better color perception than others, and this manifests as finer discrimination thresholds.

      Most of colorimetry and its various models are really made for applications, they have no interest to a vision scientist. The mantis shrimp has something like 18 different cone classes, shall we give names to every one of those and run around an 18-dimensional hypersphere? What if I put in a bionic eyeball with a spectrophotometer that senses a thousand different frequencies... at some point you need to throw out all the color models and switch over to something that scales easily, namely, sampling theory.

      Furthermore if you look into the details (which I have) you realize that these linearly separable cartesian models are an idealization rather far from reality; first of all they fail linearity tests (such as associativity rules) except under highly constrained viewing conditions and furthermore they don't describe at all the fact that some dimensions are not as strong as others (various attempts to fix this have been made with mixed results).

    18. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by davidwr · · Score: 1

      What if I put in a bionic eyeball with a spectrophotometer that senses a thousand different frequencies

      I think the best sensory analog here is the nose. It has zillions of receptors tuned to a specific type of smell.

      --
      Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    19. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by Tyler+Durden · · Score: 1

      It uses the same pathways, activates the same brain areas and cells, is processed in the same way, and interacts with other perceptions in the same way. What other sense of "internal" do you want?

      Internal in the sense of the actual subjective experience. There's a lot of variation between brains. I find it hard to believe that we can be so certain that the experience of the same frequency of light between two individuals must be completely identical.

      But even so, assume we have a complete, materialistic description of the brain, pathways, cells and such of a creature with a sensory perception we don't have. How would knowing this aid us in any way whatsoever in deducing what that perception would be like? The only way we can describe it in terms of our existing senses, which is not the same as what we're trying to find. The only way to know that is to just transplant it in your own brain somehow and experience it for ourselves.

      Think of it another way. Take a person who has been completely blind from birth who asks what it is like to see. You describe the interaction with certain frequencies of light with the eye, the signals passed to the brain and the processing it does. Describe every single possible objective detail you can think of or is even possible of knowing. Do you really think it is possible to adequately give him the answer he's looking for?

      A description of a thing is not the same as the thing itself.

      --
      Happy people make bad consumers.
    20. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by Twinbee · · Score: 1

      That can be determined experimentally as well, both by sticking electrodes into brains, and by performing clever experiments.

      There's no way we can guarantee that someone's idea of blue isn't someone else's idea of red.

      No, it doesn't mean "probably", it means they can actually only see one color.

      How do we know that they don't sense colour and light through their other senses to a degree, or even take a brighter shade as being more reddish, and a darker shade as being more bluish? Granted, it's pretty improbable, but there's still a non-zero percent chance. The point is, with Qualia it's impossible to tell.

      Just lower the lights until your night vision kicks in. Voila, you have monochromatic vision too.

      Again, we still can't say for sure whether they're seeing grey in that situation (like we do in night vision), or some other hue such as red, or blue. You're assuming they see shades of grey like us, but you can't be sure.

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    21. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by Twinbee · · Score: 1

      Interesting post and thanks. One query though, you say they see yellow and blue. Woudln't they instead perceive two of either: red, green and blue, which correspond to the three colour cones? Perhaps that yellow is really a green? If you can find the source, I'd be most grateful. I've always wanted to know what colours we would perceive if we could disable two of the three cone types (so firstly try types a+b, then types a+c, then types b+c).

      By the way, what color do you perceive the part of the world that is directly behind you as being? Light? Dark? Uniform? Blurred? Or do you "simply" perceive nothing? Or the absence of nothing? :)

      I have thought about that, and the nearest I can answer is 'nothing'. Details to the extreme periphery of my vision are the borderline between nothing and something, which is also a weird concept in itself.

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    22. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by Twinbee · · Score: 1

      Some creature's idea of red, could be some other creature's idea of blue. That's the point.

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    23. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by Twinbee · · Score: 1

      Interesting. Can you give a source which states that disabling the colour cones like that gives the colours you've claimed? I've always thought the same, but have never been able to back it up. If so, it would seem the three primary colours as red, green, and blue runs deeper than a lot of people think.

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    24. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by pydev · · Score: 1

      Internal in the sense of the actual subjective experience.

      Subjective experience is quantifiable: you ask lots of question like "which of these two colors is the third color more similar to" and "which of these words do you associate more with this color" etc.

      The only way to know that is to just transplant it in your own brain somehow and experience it for ourselves.

      Well, for monochromatic vision, you can do just that.

    25. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by RivenAleem · · Score: 1

      Mainly this manifests in differences in discrimination ability between colors as well as disagreement about what constitutes a "color match" between observers that are getting different information.

      So this is why girls can tell when those shoes don't go with that handbag?

    26. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by Lord+Ender · · Score: 1

      I don't think the term "creature's idea of red" is scientifically meaningful. How do you define that? If you can't, it's a pointless distinction--a language game.

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    27. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by Twinbee · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty much against all paranormal/mystical stuff, but Qualia would potentially be the closest to that realm whilst still being at least somewhat respected by academia.

      The whole idea is that science theoretically can't touch aspects of this stuff, because it's locked inside the subjective experience. Like you implied, red can't be defined with mere words or numbers alone, but that doesn't mean it can't exist in a very real way. And no, that doesn't mean it's a language game, since I bet that what I see as red is what you also see as red (though we can't be 100% sure).

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    28. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by Lord+Ender · · Score: 1

      Academia is not the same thing as science. There's a lot of meaningless sophistry in academia: all of sociology and much of psychology, for example. This question sounds like it fits in there somewhere.

      Can an animal detect red? That's a meaningful question. What is red? That's meaningful, too, if you're referring to the light spectrum. What does red feel like to me? That's a language game, unless you can define what you're talking about precisely.

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    29. Re:The Qualia beast raises its head again by Twinbee · · Score: 1

      What is red? That's meaningful, too, if you're referring to the light spectrum.

      But giving the exact wavelength won't help, because it may turn out that a completely different wavelength may be required for a different creature to see the same red colour. I think science will never be able to define 'red' completely, at least not its most important essence.

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
  12. Re:Stupid by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What about deaf? Apparently, there are some parents who would deliberately wish to have a deaf child.
    'We celebrated when we found out about Molly's deafness,' says Lichy. 'Being deaf is not about being disabled, or medically incomplete - it's about being part of a linguistic minority. We're proud, not of the medical aspect of deafness, but of the language we use and the community we live in.'

    Now the couple are hoping to have a second child, one they also wish to be deaf
    Not that I know anything about it, but they are out there. I hope those in the know will chime in here.

  13. What's wrong with normal? by CoffeeDog · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I can see how the topic of meddling with DNA to augment/fix people can be a slippery slope, but by itself the question of "is it morally wrong to cure colorblindness" seems to be the same as "is it morally wrong to cure short/far sightedness". We already normalize things like this and it's entirely by individual choice. You can choose to wear your glasses or not and now you'll be able to get your color vision corrected or not.

    1. Re:What's wrong with normal? by PsychoSlashDot · · Score: 1

      I can see how the topic of meddling with DNA to augment/fix people can be a slippery slope, but by itself the question of "is it morally wrong to cure colorblindness" seems to be the same as "is it morally wrong to cure short/far sightedness". We already normalize things like this and it's entirely by individual choice. You can choose to wear your glasses or not and now you'll be able to get your color vision corrected or not.

      No, no it isn't a slippery slope. You threw augmenting in, which isn't what this is about at all. It's about fixing that which is broken. There is nothing slippery or slope-like about that. If you can cure diabetes, do. If you can cure blindness, do. If you can cure paraplegia, do. If you can cure mental retardation, do. If you can cure narcolepsy, do.

      What is a moral quandary is the process of deciding what is broken. The inability to do that which the vast majority of humans can do... that's broken. So go ahead and fix colour blindness.

      All the tangential arguments about homosexuality or baldness or pedophilia or enjoying country & western music... that's hysteria and not related to the core issue.

      --
      "Oh no... he found the .sig setting."
    2. Re:What's wrong with normal? by hedwards · · Score: 1

      That's not really the same things. If you wear glasses you can take them off, and if you choose to get surgery, you are presumably returning your eyesight to the state it was originally. Curing color blindness though, is different. You're doing something that changes the way the eyes function, in most cases from the way they did originally. And you're doing it primarily for the purpose of making color blind people like color sighted people.

      It's not wrong because being able to see colors is wrong. It's wrong because people are changing in ways that they can't really comprehend and there's a high risk of people doing so without really considering whether or not it's worthwhile. A better solution would be to make sure signs are painted in proper colors and giving people augmented reality gear when it becomes available.

      I've gone somewhat color blind in one eye in recent years, and it's a very different view of things, one side is warmer and the other side is cooler. One side is decidedly easier to pass the color blindness test and the other I barely pass with. The world looks different, but not necessarily better with full color vision.

    3. Re:What's wrong with normal? by timmarhy · · Score: 1
      I think you american's are all subconsiously hung up on it due to the use of the word "color".

      instead of beating off about slippery slopes and other strawman nonsense, lets examine the issue at hand - will curing a persons colour blindness result in an improvement in their quality of life? pros: are they can get a job working as an electrician (orange brown blindness prevents you), they can apprechiate the full range of colours like every else.

      cons: ...........?

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    4. Re:What's wrong with normal? by waynemcdougall · · Score: 1

      My parents choose to have my extreme shortsightedness corrected at birth instead of it being detexted at age 12 when I got glasses. Instead of burying my head in books and learning logarithms and teaching myself to do maths in different bases, I could see the ball in sports. Instead of hiding in the library I played cricket and rugby. I became a jock and captain of the rugby team. Instead of studying computer science and going to university I tried and failed to be a sports star. Now I supervise the road construction crew in my home town. Thanks mum and dad. Not that I'd know how my life changed thanks to my cure.

      --
      Recycle PCs and build a wireless community network www.hillsborough.org.nz
    5. Re:What's wrong with normal? by davidwr · · Score: 1

      All the tangential arguments about ... baldness or pedophilia or enjoying country & western music... that's hysteria and not related to the core issue.

      I missed those arguments. That's what I get for reading only 5-rated comments. I guess the cure for that is as close as the "threshold" pull-down. I choose to not cure that defect for the time being.

      --
      Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    6. Re:What's wrong with normal? by davidwr · · Score: 1

      My parents were willing or unable to correct my congenital issue of having a shorter than average stature and a slender physique and by the time it was detected later in life there was no feasable fix for it.

      Instead of playing basketball or full-contact sports and getting attention from all the cheerleaders, I buried my head in books and learned how to maths and logarithms in different bases. I became a techno-geek and was pretty good at it, but failed to be an uber-geek. Now I'm not even a supervisor. Thanks mum and dad. Not that I'd know how my life changed had I been "cured."

      --

      Seriously, mom and dad, if you are reading this, I'm happy the way I turned out. You guys did a great job given the raw material you had to work with.

      --
      Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    7. Re:What's wrong with normal? by PsychoSlashDot · · Score: 1

      I missed those arguments. That's what I get for reading only 5-rated comments. I guess the cure for that is as close as the "threshold" pull-down. I choose to not cure that defect for the time being.

      This is me, glancing at my brilliantly-designed comment. This is me, glancing at the nice Score:2 indicator. This is me, re-reading your reply. This is me, kind of baffled.

      This is me, grinning.

      --
      "Oh no... he found the .sig setting."
  14. not wrong by parallel_prankster · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It can't be wrong if we are fixing an inability to process particular wavelengths of light.There are definitely other things that we could do when we mess with bio-engineering /genetics etc that could raise moral and ethical issues . Now, using DNA to provide someone the ability to hear like a dog etc etc, that is more serious stuff ofcourse or maybe not. Maybe it is moral that if we have technology that can improve our senses, it is ok to improve it even if we humans were not gifted with it at birth. I dont believe Nature is perfect.

  15. No. by Zadaz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No. It's not "normalization". Being able to differentiate between colors is incredibly valuable.

    Now if they were researching gene therapy to make swarthy folks more acceptably white we might have something to complain about.

    In a related note: If I could get gene therapy to let me see further into the UV and IR ranges I'd totally go for it.

    1. Re:No. by h4rr4r · · Score: 1, Funny

      I think a cure for guidoness is something we must find now, not later. The people with this disorder dye themselves orange, and are by all accounts mentally handicapped. This is not something we should let happen to our fellow humans.

    2. Re:No. by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually, the skin colour question is not entirely different. Having dark skin and living in Scotland increases your chances of suffering from vitamin D deficiency. Having light skin and living in (most of) Africa increases your chance of skin cancer. If people thought of skin colour in a rational way, rather than as some important part of their self identity, there would probably be a lot of customers for a treatment that let them toggle their melanin production. Unfortunately, there would probably be lots of people talking about 'betraying your heritage' or some other such nonsense.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    3. Re:No. by Khashishi · · Score: 1

      so, if they could've cured Michael Jackson of his whiteness would that be ok?

    4. Re:No. by Carnildo · · Score: 1

      Now if they were researching gene therapy to make swarthy folks more acceptably white we might have something to complain about.

      But what if they were researching a way to make them more resistant to Vitamin D deficiency at high latitudes?

      How much of the problem is in the phrasing, and how much is in the research itself?

      --
      "They redundantly repeated themselves over and over again incessantly without end ad infinitum" -- ibid.
  16. Morally wrong? by J'raxis · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How about you just let people invent the cure and then let them ask the individuals who are colorblind if they want to be cured or not? It's only "morally wrong" if you try to force someone to be "cured" from something they don't see as a disease.

    Let's ask another question: Is it morally wrong to deny someone a cure because in your own infinite arrogance you think it's "wrong" to give it to them?

    1. Re:Morally wrong? by girlintraining · · Score: 1

      Let's ask another question: Is it morally wrong to deny someone a cure because in your own infinite arrogance you think it's "wrong" to give it to them?

      We've already answered that in this country: No. Look at people who are transgendered. They are diagnosed by the medical community, who views surgical intervention as both medically indicated and necessary in many of those cases, the people want to treatment, but almost no insurance companies cover it and the treatment is prohibitively expensive, which means the 10 year mortality rate for those suffering from it is higher than many forms of cancer due to the psychological stress.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
  17. Oh give me a BREAK! by erroneus · · Score: 1

    "normalize"? We have a society and a world... forget that, we have poisonous foods and non-poisonous foods that can be differentiated by color. There are poisonous snakes that are differentiated by color as well. This isn't a "normalization" like gay or not-gay. It's a disability that has managed to propagate for a long time. I am glad not to be color blind. I would hate the driving related problems of being color blind, not to mention the disqualifications in jobs that may be experienced along with many other things.

    I recall some stuff about deaf people wanting to stay deaf. Once again, it's just damned stupid. I would want more senses, not fewer. Perhaps these same deaf people are just wanting their sympathetic free ride through life to continue. Who knows what the reason might be, but it is pretty clear in that I have yet to hear of any hearing person wanting to be deaf or anyone having lost their hearing not wanting it back.

    I have never heard of anyone losing color sensitivity before, but if they did, I suspect the same would be the case as with deaf people.

    1. Re:Oh give me a BREAK! by Eskarel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There's a little more gray area with deaf people. For better or worse, being deaf is part of what defines who they are and how they see and experience the world. It could be argued that changing the fact that they are deaf would change who they are as people, which can seem a little bit scary. Now personally I think that defining yourself by a disability is as mind bogglingly short sighted and stupid as defining someone else by their disability which is a form of prejudice, but people none the less do it.

      OTOH none of the people I know who are colour blind seem to define themselves that way. They don't seem to split the world into people like them and people like me, at least not on the colour blindness axis, so there's probably little risk of large personality shifts.

    2. Re:Oh give me a BREAK! by Artifakt · · Score: 1

      Many people have vision that is good enough it could be corrected beyond 20/20. Just think of the advantages of being able to see from 20 feet away what most people now can see from only 15 or 10 feet away. In practice, most people corrected this way as adults are uncomfortable with it. Many find the experience eerie or disturbing, and frequently, the persons this has been tested on develop symptoms such as headaches as they use their 'improved' vision. A substantial majority report the world looks seriously unpleasant in uniform sharp relief. Eye surgeons have become very reluctant to correct beyond average abilities until they at least test the patient for a few weeks with lenses because these reactions are so common, and sometimes opticians don't try to correct beyond 20/20 even for glasses.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    3. Re:Oh give me a BREAK! by myowntrueself · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Ok how about this.

      The whole potential human genome is a search space.

      By removing the gene for colorblindness we could remove access to potentially valuable volumes of the search space.

      Suppose that the gene for colorblindness turned out to be connected with a gene for telepathy
      such that if we remove colorblindness from the human genome we effectively rule out any possibility of evolving telepathy? (ASSUMING one thinks of telepathy as a potential valuable thing for humans to acquire; lets not get sidetracked by that).

      Just an arbitrary example of the way in which we could exclude possibilities from future generations.

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    4. Re:Oh give me a BREAK! by MaXintosh · · Score: 1

      By that logic, we should expose people's germ-line to ionizing radiation radiation to `open up search space.`

      No, colour blindness is a broken trait, which are expected to exist under natural selection, because purging them is devilishly tricky. And they keep popping up because the mutation rate for us deuterostomes is sufficiently high.

    5. Re:Oh give me a BREAK! by madpansy · · Score: 1

      Don't worry, there's no foreseeable cure for poverty, so there will be plenty of people who can't afford to remove colorblindness.

    6. Re:Oh give me a BREAK! by HellYeahAutomaton · · Score: 1

      They're not throwing up gang signs, they're using sign language, you insensitive clod.

      A proud people they are, but they don't have special flags in their autos to show us how much better they think they are than us.

      Oh, and on a more serious note, most people with disabilities do just want to blend in and be "normal" like everyone else.

    7. Re:Oh give me a BREAK! by Pentium100 · · Score: 1

      "I'm sorry, sir, but you must remain color blind and unable to get your pilots license/do some other work, because we cannot allow you to change your genes, because there is at least a slight possibility of you color blindness gene to have some unintentional benefits. You won't get those benefits though, but maybe humans in a few hundred years will."

      That's stupid.

      Also, if people hate other people because of some minor differences (skin color, religion, sexual orientation) that do not give any actual (dis)advantage, imagine how much telepaths would be hated, since they would have an advantage over mundanes.

      How is telepathy supposed to work anyway?

    8. Re:Oh give me a BREAK! by An+dochasac · · Score: 1

      No, colour blindness is a broken trait

      No, we don't know enough about this or any other trait to understand under what condition there might be benefits. For example, color blindness seems to present advantages in hunting, or an advantage in seeing that color-camouflaged predator. As an individual I would want the treatment if it were safe and affordable but what is good for an individual isn't necessarily good for society. For society the safest "rule" would be to allow this kind of genetic tweaking of "mostly harmless" traits only with consent of the individual and only in individuals who will not subsequently have children and pass the designer gene on to the next generation without their consent. Even terrible diseases such as Tay Sachs and Sickle Cell Anemia appear to have some beneficial effects (offering slight immunity to TB and Malaria in carriers).

    9. Re:Oh give me a BREAK! by Eskarel · · Score: 1

      I think I may not have been clear in my meaning. I didn't mean that deaf people are in some kind of gang or think they're better than anyone else.

      What I meant was that a disability such as deafness can have a profound impact on someone's life and can become part of someone's internal identity. Being deaf is part of what makes them who they are. As previously stated I think that defining yourself this way is as silly as letting other people define you that way, but that doesn't change the fact that people do it.

      When you start talking about curing things that define a person, especially things which a person uses to define themselves, you start treading into a certain amount of ethical gray area.

      In changing that identifying feature, you change the person, you in a sense eliminate the person who was and replace them with an entirely new individual. A rather vocal portion of people with certain kinds of disabilities seem to hold this view. I don't particularly agree with it, but it's the core of a lot of these "ethical questions" and "normalizing the population" arguments.

      My overall point was that colour blindness doesn't seem to be of sufficient impact on peoples lives that they define themselves internally with respect to it and so there's likely very few ethical problems with it and mostly of the "slippery slope" variety.

  18. Dr Pangloss's Disciples Strike Again! by TheNarrator · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Ahh... Another Dr. Pangloss who believes we live in the best of all possible worlds... We've been dealing with this sort of idiocy for quite some time now, at least since Voltaire satirized it in 1759

    http://www.shmoop.com/candide/dr-pangloss.html

    Dr. Pangloss and his philosophy are the principal focus of Voltaire’s satire. Dr. Pangloss, Candide’s tutor and mentor, teaches that in this best of all possible worlds, everything happens out of absolute necessity, and that everything happens for the best. This philosophy parodies the beliefs of Gottfried Leibniz, an Enlightenment era thinker who believed that the world was perfect and that all evil in it was simply a means to greater good.

    Every twist of the plot, every new natural disaster, disease, and incident of robbery or assault in Candide is intended to prove Pangloss’s Optimism utterly absurd and out of touch with reality. Pangloss’s personal sufferings alone are more than unusually extreme. In regard to his own misfortune, Pangloss responds that it is necessary to the greater good. The result is that the philosopher appears utterly blind to his own experiences as well as the horrors endured by his friends.

  19. as an extreme red-green colorblind person... by Laebshade · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I say "fuck you" to your moral objection. Color blindness is a disability. It may not be anywhere near as serious as being handicapped, missing an appendage, or say, a whole eye, but it does cause problems nonetheless.

    1. Re:as an extreme red-green colorblind person... by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      My moral objection is limited to "curing" children of this "disability."

      If an adult wants it, fine. Quite frankly, I don't care if an adult wants gene therapy to be lighter skinned/darker skinned/whatever. People already do a lot of plastic surgery regarding image, and producing darker skin might be better for the health than a tanning salon.

      However, let the kid grow to be 18 years old and make up his/her own mind. The slippery slope is limited IMO to the designer baby issue.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    2. Re:as an extreme red-green colorblind person... by Anaerin · · Score: 1, Troll

      I am also colourblind, and I say "fuck you" to your assertion. That the world I see has a little less green in it than the world others see (similar to 6% of the male populace) doesn't mean I have any problems in my day-to-day life. There is absolutely nothing I have encountered in life so far that required me to have different vision than what I have at the moment. Admittedly, when I choose clothing for myself, some of the choices I may make could be not quite so aesthetically pleasing to the rest of the world, and any artistic interpretations of the world that I make will certainly look a little strange to others, but none of those "issues" particularly affect my life.

      I say we certainly give people the option to "Cure" their atypical vision, just as we do for people with myopia and cataracts, but to call it a "disability" is going a little too far, IMHO.

    3. Re:as an extreme red-green colorblind person... by Mekabyte · · Score: 1

      It's not that simple. Some things can only be cured effectively in early development because other things that depend on it can't be fixed by the time the person is deemed ready to make their own decision.

    4. Re:as an extreme red-green colorblind person... by webdog314 · · Score: 1

      I agree. As an illustrator who has been stuck doing black & white work all their life, I say hell yes I would like to see a full palette of color. Find that morally objectionable? Try wearing red contacts for a few weeks and then see if you still feel the same way.

    5. Re:as an extreme red-green colorblind person... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      However, let the kid grow to be 18 years old and make up his/her own mind. The slippery slope is limited IMO to the designer baby issue.

      Sooner or later, people will be picking and choosing traits for their children. Most people will choose whatever is fashionable that year. Some people will choose totally wacky shit. Eventually, society will pick a path and more or less stabilize. Frankly I think it is wrong to tell people that they can't gene-tamper their offspring, as wrong as telling people they can't get treatments with their own stem cells. Appraise them of the risks involved and turn them loose. Anything that doesn't harm others is acceptable. Almost nobody really views babies as humans anyway; most humans are subject to the whims and wills of their parent(s) until well after they reach physical maturity, let alone before they can walk.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    6. Re:as an extreme red-green colorblind person... by IckySplat · · Score: 1

      The slippery slope is limited IMO to the designer baby issue.

      But when radical gene therapy becomes available, the child wouldn't be stuck with what his/her parents wanted. so no worries.

      --
      Help! help!, the termites are eating my DRAM!!!
    7. Re:as an extreme red-green colorblind person... by CharlyFoxtrot · · Score: 1

      Designer babies are only going to be a problem until the treatment becomes cheap enough for every one to have. Who cares if you are a blue eyed blond if I can have a $100 treatment and have all the blue eyed blond babies I want ? Nobody would care, and if nobody cares why do it ? The "advantage" would be eroded just by having the technology available.

      --
      If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error.
    8. Re:as an extreme red-green colorblind person... by Krahar · · Score: 1

      I say "fuck you" to your moral objection.

      Funny, that's how they responded to freeing the slaves, women's sufferage, and the Prohibition, and those are just the things I can quote out of the Constitution.

      Best as I can see, the nearest analogy would be a slave saying fuck you to his owner for the owner's moral objections to the slave being set free. Somehow it seems you want to do this backwards so that the color-blind person becomes analogous to a slave owner for wishing to not be color-blind. I don't see how to make that work, but I give extra points for creativity. That or I got your position backwards.

    9. Re:as an extreme red-green colorblind person... by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      ...those red/green LEDs (and some street lights). Dangerous things.

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    10. Re:as an extreme red-green colorblind person... by RobinEggs · · Score: 1

      Huh...slavery versus advances in medical science and you manage to imply it's a toss-up. For the love of god someone mod this a troll.

  20. I've seen that movie before by Bugamn · · Score: 1

    Are we talking about splicing? It went very wrong last time.

  21. As noted by others by Ralph+Spoilsport · · Score: 1
    Hell - I'd love to have a tatrachrome vision palette. Heck - I'd go for infrared, UV, even radio would be cool. Now, how I would "understand" these new "colours" (which like other colours are simply ranges of EM frequency) is beyond me, especially given as how my brain didn't evolve to decode them. But it would still be totally k3vvL in my book.

    Infrared could be very cool. Especially looking at this girl who's often on my homebound bus ride...

    Nhhhnnngngngngnggggnnnn...

    --
    Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
    1. Re:As noted by others by networkzombie · · Score: 1

      If you could see radio waves you'd think you were snorkeling in the Hudson River.

    2. Re:As noted by others by cpghost · · Score: 1

      So, basically, you want a (biological?) VISOR.

      --
      cpghost at Cordula's Web.
    3. Re:As noted by others by JesterJosh · · Score: 1

      Reminds me of Vinge Vernor's spider people in Fire Upon the Deep seeing in "plaid".

  22. slashdot would look kinda strange ... by jobst · · Score: 1

    slashdot would look kinda strange, wouldn't it?

    --
    to code or not to code, that is the question.
    1. Re:slashdot would look kinda strange ... by kitezh · · Score: 1

      It would look something like this....

    2. Re:slashdot would look kinda strange ... by GaryOlson · · Score: 1

      You mean the same way it does now? Black and white and various shades of grey with the occasional blue?

      --
      Every mans' island needs an ocean; choose your ocean carefully.
  23. Mediocre Mass Media Talk Tactics by DynaSoar · · Score: 1

    "Are we trying to 'normalize' humans to a threshold of experience?"

    We who? Implying that the listener is involved is a simplistic means to maintain their attention. The listener certainly has nothing to do with the project.

    Are the researchers doing these things? No, they're only trying to solve an interesting problem. They're not trying to do anything to anyone. They're only trying to make this available.

    Only the potential recipient has the responsibility. Nobody else matters.

    --
    "I may be synthetic, but I'm not stupid." -- Bishop 341-B
  24. WANT! by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    Ah, but where does it end?

    "Would you like ultra-wide spectrum super-HD eyes with 60x optical zoom, Internet-connected HUD and complimentary laser cannons, just like everyone else has?"

    Oh, I hope it doesn't end there!

    *squee!*

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  25. As a colorblind man by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If I could get my colorblindness fixed/cured/eliminated and it's affordable, I'd do it. Seriously, it doesn't seem like a big deal, but there's stuff I simply don't see and I'm not even that color blind. The orange paint on grass used by contractors? Essentially invisible to me. Entire fields are closed to me due to colorblindness. Can't become an electrician due to color coding, for example.

    The whole "moral" aspect is by people who think that an amputee shouldn't want their legs back just to be "normal" (obviously, an extreme example).

    If I'm colorblind and that can be fixed, awesome.
    If I'm blind and that can be fixed, awesome.
    If I'm deaf and that can be fixed, awesome.
    If I'm paraplegic and that can be fixed, awesome.

    Seriously, how is this possibly a moral argument?!?

    1. Re:As a colorblind man by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's a moral argument because political correctness means that we aren't allowed to refer to people who perceive a subset of what everyone else perceives as defective, or by any terms that imply such a thing. We have to call them 'differently able' or some other such nonsense. It has become a core idea of our culture (somehow) that you shouldn't try to improve people, you should just accept them as they are.

      Our descendants, who can alter their skin pigmentation at will, see from 10nm to 1000nm, hear from 0.1Hz to 100kHz, and directly perceive magnetic fields will mock this idea to the extent that it deserves to be mocked.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    2. Re:As a colorblind man by Puff_Of_Hot_Air · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think the issue that people are missing is not "would you want to be cured from X problem", rather it is the manner of the cure. This cure modifies your DNA, and our genetic identity is something that defines us. I see paralles to the concepts raised in "the eternal sunshine of the spotless mind". This specific case of colour blindness is not particulary controversial or worrying, but playing with DNA takes us down the GATACA path (enhanced DNA, class balance between those with access vs those without etc). It raises ethical questions that need to be discussed. As a side note, my wife is colour blind (extremely rare for women), but she tells me she would not get the cure. She thinks of her colour blindness as part of her identity.

    3. Re:As a colorblind man by the_raptor · · Score: 1

      No the moral argument is from some of these "defectives" that don't feel they are "defective", and in fact don't want to be "like everybody else". This line of thought is quite strong in segments of the autistic, and congenitally blind or deaf communities.

      Ultimately this kind of treatment will be performed in utero and so autistic's or congenitally deaf people may cease to be born. To these people that is like saying "we are going to fix racial discrimination by changing all black babies into white babies".

      --

      ========
      CINC, 4th Penguin Legion
    4. Re:As a colorblind man by Krahar · · Score: 1

      This cure modifies your DNA, and our genetic identity is something that defines us.

      So is our choice in breakfast cereal and the color of our shoes. What defines you is entirely a matter of perspective.

    5. Re:As a colorblind man by martas · · Score: 1

      our genetic identity is something that defines us

      that's simply not true.
      it's late, and i'm too tired to list all the reasons why. see if you can guess a few.

    6. Re:As a colorblind man by WarwickRyan · · Score: 1

      I'm colorblind, and it's a pain in the ass. It's as much a disability as having only one eye (no debth perception) or having poor hearing in one ear (poor positional detection).

      Have real trouble with electronics (one of my hobbies), and certain seasons look shit to me. For example Xmas is dark, dreary and plain ugly. All these dark reds, dark browns and dark greens. It's depressing. Playing computer games is also effected. Especially FPS, or anything else where they use lots of reds/greens.

      There *ARE* some things we can do though. If you use red/green lights when doing electronics you can see the difference between the reds and greens (green is black under red light, and visa versa). So it shouldn't have to exclude you from certain careers.

    7. Re:As a colorblind man by davidwr · · Score: 1

      If I'm deaf and that can be fixed, awesome.

      There are deaf people who would argue with you on that one.

      By the way, just because your color-blindness could be fixed doesn't mean your brain could learn to process the new information. There have been several people who were blind from birth or a very young age and as adults had their sight given to them through medicine. They had a hard time of it. In at least one case in the last 20 years, the person went back to living as a blind person.

      --
      Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    8. Re:As a colorblind man by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      There are definitely amputees who don't want their limbs back. Aimee Mullins did an interesting talk for TED and an article for Gizmodo on this topic. And of course there are some who do.

      Electronics doesn't have to be closed to colorblind people. That's a completely contingent state of affairs. Non-colorblind people made decisions that ended up excluding colorblind people. Similar decisions were made with regard to traffic lights and so on.

      The moral question is actually a question of values, and is twofold: first, why do we think it's better/easier to change someone's body rather than change the way we make (like the electronic example), even when those decisions are totally arbitrary? Second, why do we value uniformity over diversity? It seems to me that we can get into the idea of a world where everyone has full color vision, or where everyone is colorblind, but we can't handle a world where people of different color visions coexist and make allowances for each other. Diversity of course has the potential for misunderstanding and conflict, but doesn't it have benefits also?

  26. Re:Stupid by KiloByte · · Score: 3, Insightful

    While I despise being sue-happy, this is one of the cases where I really hope the child sues her parents when she grows up for intentionally crippling her.

    --
    The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
  27. Will they be able to use this technique by n6kuy · · Score: 1

    ... to restore our lost squant vision?

    --
    If you disagree with me on social issues, then it's pretty clear that you are a narrow-minded bigot.
  28. No, that is a stupid question. by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

    It would not be any more morally wrong than me using contacts or glasses.

  29. silly question by slew · · Score: 4, Insightful

    better link

    Would curing a slow-growing cancer or rheumatoid arthritis morally wrong?
    How about giving someone a pair of glasses, or contacts or perhaps laser-eye surgery?
    How about restoring hearing to a deaf person (or simply the ability to hear about 20KHz again)?
    How about vaccinating against rubella or meningitis to prevent deafness?
    Or vaccinating people succeptible to polio or small pox?
    Well one could argue that many of these are approximatly the same level of intervention as curing color blindness.

    The article generally assert that if DNA is some magic new science to be wary of because someone else's "fix" can be another person's "enhancement" as if this is some sort of new issue. Sadly it is not. HGH is a recent example of something not-dna related. HGH is medically useful to accelerate the development of children that have development deficiencies and are used by some atheletes to gain an enhancement. Some people are taking ritalin and adderall to help with hyperactivity, but others to get better SAT scores. An older example might be taking antibiotics or steroids.

    DNA retro-technology isn't moral or immoral, it's just a new technology like many others that spun out of scientific research. The people who apply the technology are either moral or immoral (or amoral) about it. Sadly there are some of each type that apply any technological advance. I guess the question at least keeps bioethicist employed.

    1. Re:silly question by Yosho · · Score: 1

      How about restoring hearing to a deaf person (or simply the ability to hear about 20KHz again)?

      You joke, but there's actually a very sizable deaf community that is proud of the fact that they're "differently abled" and would be quiet upset if you insisted on "curing" them.

      --
      Karma: Terrifying (mostly affected by atrocities you've committed)
    2. Re:silly question by webdog314 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Perhaps, but I'd bet none of them is a musician for a living. As an artist, I can tell you flat out, I would LOVE to be able to see a full palette.

    3. Re:silly question by Pentium100 · · Score: 1

      Forcing someone to undergo a medical procedure is wrong, especially if their condition is not life threatening or dangerous to others (some mental diseases).

      However, forcing the person to remain disabled even though it is possible to fix them is also wrong.

    4. Re:silly question by davidwr · · Score: 1

      As an artist, I can tell you flat out, I would LOVE to be able to see a full palette.

      I'm not color-blind and neither I nor most human beings can see a "full" palette, unless you define "full" as what most human beings can see.

      There are a few tetrachromatic women who can distinguish two seemingly-identical orange colors in ways most people cannot.

      According to a 5-rated posts made earlier, some people in WWII who had cataract surgery could see near-ultraviolet much better than you or me. While you and I can both feel certain infrared frequencies because of the heat effect, it would be nice to detect them visually and use those colors in artwork.

      Also, to be nit-picky, none of us can see the palette that radio receivers and many scientific instruments can detect, but I'll grant you that this is outside the scope of "palette" as it applies to the visual arts.

      --
      Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    5. Re:silly question by davidwr · · Score: 1

      Forcing someone to undergo a medical procedure is wrong

      The thrust of this article was genetic fixes, which in many cases will be done while well before the child is born, possibly before the egg is fertilized. In other cases it will be genetic manipulation of a newborn so his hearing will be developed in time for him to easily learn sounds and spoken language, or his eyesight developed well enough so he can learn the meaning of what he sees while his brain is still developing.

      Back to your original statement though:

      Forcing someone to undergo a medical procedure is wrong

      What about children and mentally-incompetent adults with non-contagious, non-life-threatening, non-other-people-threatening conditions?

      You see this all the time in pediatric clinics, geriatric clinics, and sometimes trauma centers when family members or emergency-room doctors have to decide a course of treatment that will or could improve the patient's life but which, if untreated, would not kill the patient.

      I've lost track of the number of medical decisions my parents made for me when I was a child. If they had decided to withhold treatment or use a less comprehensive treatment I would still be alive today, but my immediate suffering, long-term quality of life, or both would've been impacted negatively. Someday, if they live long enough to lose their ability to make their own health-care decisions, I may have to make similar decisions for them.

      By the way, even the state all but mandates children undergo certain medical procedures: Unless your parents have a religious or other strong moral exemption, some countries or political subdivisions insist that children undergo a procedure called "inoculation" to protect them and society from certain frequently-fatal or -debilitating diseases before the children are allowed into government-run schools. There may be countries that mandate this even for home- or non-government-run-schooled children.

      --
      Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    6. Re:silly question by davidwr · · Score: 1

      usually with the parents consent, but I bet a lot of doctors see that as a formality and if the parents weren't around would just go ahead and get it done. [emphasis added]

      Not in America's litigious society they won't. If the baby dies during a parent-authorized surgery and it's not due to medical negligence, the doctor will prevail in a lawsuit. But if the parents aren't asked first, the doctor will lose and may face an ethics hearing.

      Besides, some parents' religious beliefs preclude things like removing extra fingers or other "cosmetic" surgery, even if by the standards of this world (i.e. excluding religious concerns) it is clearly in the infant's best interests.

      --
      Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    7. Re:silly question by Pentium100 · · Score: 1

      And yet again, I managed to condense my thought into one sentence that has almost the opposite meaning form the one that I intended.

      What I meant, was that it would be wrong to tie a deaf person up and drag him to a doctor, who would restore his hearing. If the deaf person does not want to hear, he can remain deaf.

      Also, it is accepted that children mostly cannot think for themselves, so the parents do the thinking for them. If the medical procedure will affect the kids quality of life in a meaningful way (removing disabilities for example), then the parents should be able to give consent for the kid. The parents should not be able to modify the kid to make it worse (for example, making the kid deaf), also the parents should not be able to modify the kid for purely cosmetic reasons or due to religious beliefs ("I want my kid to have blue eyes and blond hair"; "My religion commands me to make my kid to be white with black spots"). The parents should be able to select an embryo which has the requires characteristics, but they should not be able to modify the kid (when he grows up, if he still wants to be like the parents wanted, he can modify himself).

      Vaccination should be compulsory (and it probably is in my country) for very dangerous and possibly incurable diseases, like polio, smallpox etc. If the kid grows up and wants to die, there are other ways to accomplish that without contracting an infectious disease and spreading it to others.

      Mental diseases are a different matter. If the disease makes the person a danger to himself or others, he should be cured without asking for permission (or you could give him a choice - mental hospital or cure).
      If the does not make the person dangerous and the person is able to function kinda normally, then you should ask for consent. I mean things like Aspergers.
      If the disease does not make the person dangerous, but makes him unable to function normally without a lot of help, he should be cured so as not to be a drain on others*.

      *now someone will attack me about this point, but I meant this: if the person is unable to live without a lot of help from others (basically, without the help, he will die because he cannot go to work, buy or grow food etc), then he should be fixed so he is able to survive without the extensive help, because then the resources used to continually help him could be used to help a person who cannot be fixed. This should apply both to physical and mental defects.

      This assumes that the procedure is very low risk. If the procedure is risky, then it's wither the parents consent (if the procedure is only possible or less risky for a kid than adult) or the consent of the person himself.

  30. Re:Stupid by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

    You can learn sign language perfectly well if you can hear. Lots of people can.

    Some people feel the need to take seeing the silver lining too far. Our kid is deaf? Oh, that's perfect! We were hoping for that all along! Hopefully the next one will be too! Hey, EVERYBODY should be deaf!

  31. Well, why don't we change it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What if they someday find a "gay gene" (or even just those for various intersex conditions) and cure those?

    "Would you like to be heterosexual, just like everyone else?"

    (The interesting thing about that is that you can piss off both sides of that debate. What if, in the future, being gay or not was indisputably a choice thanks to medical science? Would those who chose to cure themselves be seen as traitors or...?)

    1. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      This is why the part of the question "just like everybody else?" makes the question immoral to ask. You just ask if they want to expand their visual range. That's all.

    2. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Seems like it would still be the end users choice.

    3. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What if they someday find a "gay gene" (or even just those for various intersex conditions) and cure those?

      What if they find a gene that makes it so people won't post hypothetical situations on web sites that are for the sole purpose of being controversial, and that aren't really relevant to the conversation at hand, and cure those?

      "Would you like to stay relevant, like everyone else?"

      --
      by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
    4. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by __aasqbs9791 · · Score: 1

      Actually, that brings up a good point. If you are talking about end users, I believe it becomes silly to ask if it's moral or not. To each their own and all. But what if you are talking about the parents of said 'end user' making that choice?

    5. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by genner · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually, that brings up a good point. If you are talking about end users, I believe it becomes silly to ask if it's moral or not. To each their own and all. But what if you are talking about the parents of said 'end user' making that choice?

      The other option is to let the state dictate the parental decisions instead. Both systems would be abused but I believe the parents are less likely to screw things up.

    6. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by *s.panzer* · · Score: 1

      How is this not relevant? Both are (possibly) inherited 'conditions' that help to make up who we are. And if being gay is inherited, it is likely to be curable just like colour-blindness appears to be now. Honestly, as a young gay guy, a cure for homosexuality would definitely catch my eye. Never having to second guess whether or not a possible mate is interested in my gender sounds highly appealing. In my case its not just homophobia, as I have been lucky enough to avoid a lot of that.

    7. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by Thiez · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > I get a LOT more sex, now that I'm out, than I did when I was a closet case and trying to be straight.

      And this couldn't have anything to do with your motivation? Might it be that you didn't try to have sex with quite as much enthousiasm as you do now?

    8. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by gemada · · Score: 1

      maybe we can cure fundamentalism while we're at it.

    9. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      Are you saying that one day they might find a gene that will double the number of people I find attractive? Massively increasing the chances of having sex with someone I desire? Oh, wait. You said a "gay gene" not a "bi-sexual gene"... Never mind.

    10. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      Call me naive but I fail to see how the government could abuse the power to decide whether a child should be gay.

      Perhaps you could eliminate their reproduction abilities if they were men. But... there are so many ways around that already that I can't see it practically being abused to anyone's benefit.

    11. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by RobinEggs · · Score: 1

      Yeah...that's something I never understand about people who figure gay isn't a choice. I have no clue either way, but homosexuality seems sort of anti-Darwinian. If you're genetically programmed for entirely non-procreative sex then you're programmed for eliminating your own genes, which is by any interpretation of evolutionary science a little fucked up. If we go beyond the most typical mating systems in humans like marriage and such then I suppose surrogacy or some such can provide a way of procreating, but even then it doesn't seem to fit evolutionary anthropology very well: how do you, as a gay man, come to be if homosexuals must pass their genes through a social mechanism that doesn't exist until you were already gay and needed it to exist?

      Anyway, it all sort of confuses me. I don't know if I'm a tad homophobic, but I think they're pretty valid scientific questions.

    12. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by slim · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How is the parent post not relevant? He is talking about a condition that some actually view as a disease, others view as a lifestyle choice, and still others view as just the way some people are.

      If we can find someone who considers colour blindness to be a lifestyle choice, we're on our way to relevancy.

    13. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by omfgnosis · · Score: 1

      I hope you get modded up. The fact that "just like everybody else" is necessary to frame the question is the heart of the moral question itself. There is no ailment, and thus no cure, except for the presence of different traits in a majority of others.

    14. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by omfgnosis · · Score: 1

      Except it would probably be the parents' choice in most cases, as the condition can be detected before a child can be able to make such a choice. And it's quite likely that it would eventually be a social choice, regarded (as seen above) the same way as childhood deafness.

    15. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by omfgnosis · · Score: 1

      It's not hypothetical. It frames the moral foundation of the question in terms that are more contemporary. The moral question is, at its core, whether "normal" is "healthy", "what is normal or healthy?", and whether the two, conflated, are a social responsibility.

    16. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by gr8dude · · Score: 1

      Don't you think that such questions are good for exercising one's analytical skills? You can go through various scenarios in your head, discuss this with friends, generate some interesting ideas.

      In such discussion points I often make "accidental discoveries" that are not relevant in a particular context, but which can be successfully applied in another one.

      To address your question - if they "fix" the gene for posting hypothetical situations, we'll get a "-20% chance of finding magic items".

    17. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by ultranova · · Score: 1

      The other option is to let the state dictate the parental decisions instead. Both systems would be abused but I believe the parents are less likely to screw things up.

      The third option would be to simply refuse to make any such changes to anyone under the age of majority. That would prevent any chance of abuse by putting the choice where it belongs: the person in question.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    18. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 1

      Well, a "cure" for homosexuality would be relevant. Conjecture about the morality of a hypothetical "cure" for homosexuality is as irrelevant as a discussion as to whether Superman or the Hulk would win, if they ever fought (Hulk would win, BTW).

      --
      by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
    19. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 1

      If you honestly believe that the original post was anything but an attempt to polarize the discussion, and would have any effect on the thread other than just that, I'd agree.

      --
      by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
    20. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by Sancho · · Score: 1

      Begging the question. Most people are irrelevant.

    21. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by davidwr · · Score: 1

      What if they someday find a "gay gene" (or even just those for various intersex conditions) and cure those who don't have it?

      There, fixed that for you.

      No, I'm not seriously saying everyone should go out and get the gay gene, far from it, but the issue of "which condition has the moral high ground" - the dominant one or the rare one - frequently has the answer of "neither one, both are equally acceptable."

      For some conditions, such as those that lead to pediatric death or those that have no known positive effects, fixing the condition is all but a no-brainer. For others, such as conditions that lead to Asperger's syndrome, ADD, extreme shortness or tallness, and possibly even congenital or early-life deafness (ask the deaf community about this one), there are arguments to be made that we shouldn't tinker with mother nature on behalf of our children. Then there are others, such as changing non-extreme size variations, boosting a near-normal or normal IQ via genetic manipulation, giving people (or sharks) laser-beams attached to their eyes, etc. that most professional ethicists have problems with.

      --
      Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    22. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by skine · · Score: 1

      But what about:

      "Would you like to be homosexual, or be just like everyone else?"

    23. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      There is no evidence for a gay gene. And if there were one it would only be responsible for a small small number of cases amongst humans.

      I'd like to think that by the time we find and can edit said gay gene that any countries that can afford it would be over their whole anti-gay religious stupidity. It'd be especially stupid to 'cure' gayness en masse as our planet's population begins to peak.

    24. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by genner · · Score: 1

      The other option is to let the state dictate the parental decisions instead. Both systems would be abused but I believe the parents are less likely to screw things up.

      The third option would be to simply refuse to make any such changes to anyone under the age of majority. That would prevent any chance of abuse by putting the choice where it belongs: the person in question.

      Then you'll have people screaming that the government ruined their childhood.

    25. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Then you'll have people screaming that the government ruined their childhood.

      Yes, but the question wasn't "how to make everyone happy", which is impossible anyway; it was "how to prevent abuse, as in someone - parents, government, or anyone or thing else in a position of power in relation to his potential victims - reprogramming others to abide by his values".

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    26. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by genner · · Score: 1

      Then you'll have people screaming that the government ruined their childhood.

      Yes, but the question wasn't "how to make everyone happy", which is impossible anyway; it was "how to prevent abuse, as in someone - parents, government, or anyone or thing else in a position of power in relation to his potential victims - reprogramming others to abide by his values".

      This would leave someone who wants to change their sexuality without any recourse. How is that any different from making the choice for them?

    27. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      There's also a fourth option: Make everybody bi-sexual.

      Then they can choose on a case-by-case basis.

    28. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by w0mprat · · Score: 1

      What if they someday find a "gay gene" (or even just those for various intersex conditions) and cure those?

      "Would you like to be heterosexual, just like everyone else?"

      (The interesting thing about that is that you can piss off both sides of that debate. What if, in the future, being gay or not was indisputably a choice thanks to medical science? Would those who chose to cure themselves be seen as traitors or...?)

      Offering the choice is not the same as shoving it down everyones throat.

      Add in that the opposite choice would be true, the technology might allow one to be made gay.

      "Would you like to be gay, bisexual or asexual, unlike everyone else?"

      People can go to great lengths to modify themselves to not be like everyone else, to stand out.

      Bisexuality would double your dating prospects, you can bet some would opt for it if there was a inexpensive treatement.

      --
      After logging in slashdot still does not take you back to the page you were on. It's been that way for 20 years.
    29. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      There won't be any fight. Superman, like always, will simply fly away.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    30. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by ultranova · · Score: 1

      This would leave someone who wants to change their sexuality without any recourse. How is that any different from making the choice for them?

      They have the recourse of waiting until they're legally adult and having it changed.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    31. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by genner · · Score: 1

      This would leave someone who wants to change their sexuality without any recourse. How is that any different from making the choice for them?

      They have the recourse of waiting until they're legally adult and having it changed.

      That's far too late for the senior prom.

    32. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by Bakkster · · Score: 1

      It'd be especially stupid to 'cure' gayness en masse as our planet's population begins to peak.

      To flip the coin, what if governments started to cause genetic gayness, as a way to reduce birth rates? How's that for a moral dilemma?

      --
      Write your representatives! Repeal the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics!
    33. Re:Well, why don't we change it? by werfu · · Score: 1

      Actually, sexual orientation is not by itself a genetic feature. It's mostly a mix of personal development AND of chemical functionality. It's been shown that effeminate men does have a smaller amygdala just like woman. But, being effeminate by itself is not the cause of being gay. So, having someone cured for being effeminate will only have him act with more virility but he could still prefer men. Keep in mind that the concept of sexual orientation by itself is man made. On the animal side, there's a difference between reproducing and getting pleasure. One can only be accomplished with the opposite sex while the other can be accomplished with whatever you see fit. It's only a cultural and moral matter, which are overrated IMHO.

  32. Re:Stupid by sonicmerlin · · Score: 1

    Lol. It's not just deaf people. There's a significant community of midgets who have the same attitude about their children and their community.

  33. Re:Only if you're female by laron · · Score: 1

    tetrachromat requires 4 color receptor coding genes...2 on each X-chromosome...the y-chromosome can only hold 1.

    The genes wouldn't have to be on the X-chromosome, would they?
    In a similar vein, AFAIK this gene injection by virus is not terribly precise, i. e. it ends up somewhere in your DNA. With a bit of luck, it won't break an important gene.

    --
    "Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master."
  34. Re:Stupid by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    While I despise being sue-happy, this is one of the cases where I really hope the child sues her parents when she grows up for intentionally crippling her.

    "Intentionally crippling" in this case meaning giving birth to?

    I would hope no court would entertain a possibility of such a suit.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  35. "Cure" colourblindness? by Anaerin · · Score: 1

    I do hope nobody's jumping to the conclusion "Colourblind = can't see colour", 'cause that's very wrong indeed. I am colourblind, but I can still see colours. Maybe they're not the same as what you see, but I can still see them. For example, a "Green" traffic light is much less saturated than the "Red" and "Yellow" lights next to it, almost white in fact.

    http://www.eyecaresource.com/conditions/color-blindness/ is a good reference, as indeed is the Wikipedia article, which also states:

    There are some studies which conclude that color blind individuals are better at penetrating certain color camouflages and it has been suggested that this may be the evolutionary explanation for the surprisingly high frequency of congenital red-green colour blindness

    At which point, are we putting society as a whole at a disadvantage by denying this evolutionary quirk?

    The other question you may get asked is "How will everything look different?". It's a tough question to answer, akin to describing the sound of music to a deaf person. For most colourblind people, barring a few speciality fields (pilot, train driver), their colourblindness is not a particular hurdle, and barring a few strange choices in the wardrobe department, many may not even notice their "disability" until it is pointed out to them. There are more than enough other clues, contextual or positional clues for example, for it not to make much of a difference. So all in all it's an aesthetic choice.

  36. Propagation of (dis)abilities by benjamindees · · Score: 1

    The thought occurred to me that many mutations that are disabling below some certain threshold would tend to propagate, due to the selective advantage of having a set of two parents with similar genetic defects, and the tendency of people to seek out mates with similar habits and abilities.

    So, for instance, a deaf child with two deaf parents would tend to do better than a deaf child with only one deaf parent. And a deaf person might seek out a deaf mate. So this (even small) selective pressure would over time tend to segregate people by major disability and help to propagate them.

    --
    "I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
  37. Re:Stupid by fenix849 · · Score: 1

    Honestly my response to those parents would be, perhaps the problem is that your community is so exclusive in its social requirements of a member that you have to be deaf to be a part of it, even if you can both hear and know sign language.

    I'm not saying that the rest of the world at large is completely in acceptance of people with disabilities (and i know people with disabilities dislike this word, as i have one myself), but as a generalisation the level of humanity and social acceptance from the pulic is constantly rising, and at a point now, where in my opinion it needs little improvement.

    Disability is a crucial part of evolutionary variance, without change of all kinds the human species cannot continue. Evolution is like a poker game, and the human race has been changing the rules (some would call it cheating) ever since neanderthal tied a rock to a stick to make an axe, why stop now?

    There will always be individuals who are intolerant of difference, they are obviously either lacking the willpower to to overcome their biologic impulses or are socially uneducated

    This is despite our genetic programming built over hundreds and thousands of years to cast out those that could weaken the species as a whole.

    This is imho evidenced by watching how young children who've yet to be taught social norms and etiquette react to strong visible difference or impairment

    /rant

  38. Re:Stupid by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I remember reading that story and being shocked at how narrow minded the parents were. Why would you wish your children to experience a more limited fraction of the universe than they need to? If I had children and a doctor told me that they could have the ability to sense magnetic fields or see ultraviolet then I'd be very happy for them to have that opportunity. I wouldn't say 'no, please cripple their senses to the same degree that mine are crippled so that they can relate to me better' and doing so sounds like it comes very close to child abuse.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  39. Re:Stupid by KiloByte · · Score: 1

    They didn't conceive the child naturally, they selected embryos to ensure deafness.

    --
    The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
  40. Er-duh. by Sitnalta · · Score: 1

    No. No it isn't. You'd have to be a fucking idiot not to want to be cured of colorblindness.

    Ask this question again when a cure for homosexuality is found.

  41. Re:Only if you're female by girlintraining · · Score: 1

    The genes wouldn't have to be on the X-chromosome, would they?

    And technically, you don't have to be female to be a tetrochromat. It's the TDF gene that determines sex, not the chromosome. And due to a variety of genetic, environmental, and endocrinological disorders, a person's sex doesn't always match their genes.

    --
    #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
  42. Re:Stupid by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    They didn't conceive the child naturally, they selected embryos to ensure deafness.

    It still doesn't matter. "She" wasn't intentionally crippled by this action.

    If her life is that miserable, I fully support her moral right to suicide. That would not be any worse for her than had her embryo not been selected in the first place....

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  43. Re:Stupid by phantomfive · · Score: 2, Informative

    Interesting thread on that very topic is to be found here. In that same story were several other threads on the same topic, and one even discussing that messed up family (if I remember correctly). Here is another quite emotional comment. As far as I can tell, it boils down to the fact that if you 'cure' someone, it implies that they were deficient to begin with, and a lot of deaf people object to the idea that they are deficient. Sad that it gets in the way of the joys of music and the convenience of talking, but to each his own.

    --
    Qxe4
  44. Call me crazy but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I'm actually curious how much these "sicknesses" play a role in our future evolution. I'm no geneticist but I'm guessing that alot of these genetic transformations are mutations of some sort or another. If this is the case could these mutations eventually change into something else? I mean when the dinosaurs arms started getting smaller and smaller, eventually evolving into wings, etc. do you think somewhere, it might have appeared strange or different? What about skin color, hair color, etc.? Do you think that variations appeared strange at first, or even consider some defect or disease? Could color-blindness or even blindness be some mutations that may after thousands of years lead to some variations in the species? If so, what do you feel could be some of the issues with DNA modifications - could it potentially effect our future evolution?

    Just some questions and thoughts.

  45. Try: You can't fly at night by addikt10 · · Score: 1

    I think that I can see just like everyone else, but I can't see the dot patterns.

    Actually, sometimes I CAN see the dot patterns, but even though I can trace them with my finger, I can't see it will enough to tell what the number or pattern is

    Because I can't see that dot pattern, I can only fly during the day (fly as in pilots license). I'll also never be instrument rated.

    I also can't see some informational graphics. My idiot local newspaper decided to publish election results of a contentious issue by using tones of red or green if counties voted one way or another. I had to ask someone if they could please explain what the results were.

    If it limits me in those ways, then it is a disability. It does, and it is.

  46. Re:Stupid by nacturation · · Score: 1

    If a different embryo were selected, she would not exist. It's like saying "If only my parents had married different people, the egg that would have been me and the sperm that would have been me would have coupled with different sperm and egg, and I would be two people now!"

    --
    Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
  47. If anything is "morally wrong" here... by John+Hasler · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...it is to even ask such a question.

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  48. The rich become a different species by Geof · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ah, but where does it end?

    "Would you like ultra-wide spectrum super-HD eyes with 60x optical zoom, Internet-connected HUD and complimentary laser cannons, just like everyone else has?"

    Actually, you have hit the nail on the head. The doctor goes to cure your son's colorblindness, and asks: "While we're in there, would you like to pay some more money to make him taller? Boost his IQ? Make him live longer?"

    I'm taking this example from Dr William Leiss. The problem is not that this would be wrong for the child (just assuming for the moment that there wouldn't be nasty unintended side-effects). The problem is the impact on society as a whole. Rich people can afford to extend their lifespans, make themselves beautiful, smarter, and so on. The elite become physically different from birth: physically, mentally, perhaps even morally superior. Imagine a society in which the rich lived twice as long. Do you think this would be just? Do you think freedom and stability could exist under these circumstances?

    If this happens, Leiss worries that there will be one more genetic tweak: some of these elites will make their offspring genetically incompatible with others. Differences between classes will be transformed into differences between species.

    Of course curing colorblindness on its own will not do that. It may be extremely desirable. But at some point fixing things turns into improving things, and that can be a very dangerous road to go down. There is no clear line between fixing and improving. Before we start down this path, we should think very hard about where we draw that line. Once the line has been crossed, momentum and the power of wealth will be very hard to stop.

    Someone I love very much is colorblind. But I think the dangers really do bear thinking about.

    1. Re:The rich become a different species by The+Archon+V2.0 · · Score: 1

      If this happens, Leiss worries that there will be one more genetic tweak: some of these elites will make their offspring genetically incompatible with others. Differences between classes will be transformed into differences between species.

      Best news I've heard all day. As much as I loathe Paris Hilton, I'd gladly see her live twice as long if I got a guarantee that the extension treatments sterilized her.

    2. Re:The rich become a different species by Obfuscant · · Score: 1
      Actually, you have hit the nail on the head. The doctor goes to cure your son's colorblindness, and asks: "While we're in there, would you like to pay some more money to make him taller? Boost his IQ? Make him live longer?"

      The difference is that the cure for colorblindness is a repair to a known-defective gene which will provide NORMAL vision for the patient. The rest of what you ask about isn't.

      Now, making someone who is genetically short "taller" may fit in that same category, so I would say that gets the same answer. Ditto if the patient has a known genetic defect that leaves him with an IQ of 3. Of course. FIX what is wrong.

      But making someone who is NORMAL "taller" is not fixing something that is broken, it won't merit the same answer. It isn't FIXING what is wrong. It is a different kind of question.

      But at some point fixing things turns into improving things,...

      No, at some point "fixing things" turns into "not fixing things", and that's pretty easy to differentiate. "Fixing things" is, by default, "improving things", at least for those who suffer from being broken.

      Someone I love very much is colorblind. But I think the dangers really do bear thinking about.

      Do you worry about providing sulfa drugs to someone who has an infection? You do realize that this is "fixing things" using technology. You do realize that rich people can afford more sulfa drugs than poor people can. How about operations to fix defective heart valves? Again, fixing things using technology. Do you have any difficulty determining what is "fixing things" and what is "not fixing things" when it comes to surgery? Does that rhinoplasty correct a defect like a cleft palatte, or is it just to make your nose look better? Any confusion about which is a fix?

      Do you question the right of someone with a cleft palatte to get plastic surgery to fix it just because someone else might have the same surgeon operate for purely cosmetic reasons? Then I wouldn't worry about people not knowing the difference with fixing colorblindness.

    3. Re:The rich become a different species by OrangeCatholic · · Score: 1

      >Imagine a society in which the rich lived twice as long.

      We already have this. Japan's life expectancy is 82 years. There's a bunch of African countries in the low 40's.

      >some of these elites will make their offspring genetically incompatible with others.

      This happened too, when the royal families of Europe started inbreeding. Technically, they were still "genetically compatible," but they chose not to be.

      >There is no clear line between fixing and improving.

      Indeed, all of our "improvements" have side-effects. Just look at what cars and power lines are doing to the atmosphere. I don't see a clear line between genetic improvements and technological ones. It's just another dangerous territory to be entering.

    4. Re:The rich become a different species by fragMasterFlash · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Some would argue that we have that already in the USA, hence the rich conservatives blocking health care reform to maintain their superiority.

    5. Re:The rich become a different species by Steauengeglase · · Score: 1

      I can't help but think I'm more frightened by the opposite happening. Imagine getting your designer baby on the cheap. It is bad enough that we get a generation of kids with names like Brittany.

    6. Re:The rich become a different species by jwiegley · · Score: 1

      "All men are created equal" is bullshit, and you know it. Some people ARE superior to others. Name whatever metric you wish but you will find success and failure. Don't believe me? Then what is the point of dating? Why not just marry the first person you meet after age 18? (Answer: because I'm correct.)

      So where is the law of nature that prohibits the superior from living while the inferior die off? Oh, wait... that's right, in fact the opposite rule exists.

      I fucking hate this crippled socialist thinking that says if everybody can't have something then nobody gets it. Utter crap.

      --
      I will never live for sake of another man, nor ask another man to live for mine.
    7. Re:The rich become a different species by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      some of these elites will make their offspring genetically incompatible with others

      SLIPPERY SLOPE! Sorry. When fellow geeks give such direct examples of logical fallacies I tend to get a bit....irrational.....

      First off:

      A) Curing color blindness is NOT the same thing as creating a genetic super-species. One does not automatically imply the other. One could be embraced while the other resisted. Therefore, the possibility that the other might occur anyway is no reason to reject the one.

      Secondly:

      B) Choosing not to use genetic knowledge and technological advancements to cure genetic diseases will NOT prevent the technological progress that would bring about the ability to create a genetic bifurcation in our species. So, preventing the one does not prevent the other. So again, this is no argument to resist using genetic manipulation to cure ourselves.

      Thirdly:

      C) Genetic bifurcation could very well happen anyway, without the aid of genetic technologies, simply through preferential mate selection. It has happened before, in fact. That is why we don't have tails.

      Fourthly:

      D) All useful technological advancements, absolutely without exception, could be used for evil purposes. The evil doesn't come from the technology, it comes from the people. To refrain from empowering ourselves out of fear of what evil people might do with it does us greater harm than the having of the technology would. There are some things that are simply worth the risk...and the capacities provided by transhuman advancements are a prime example.

      Fifthly:

      E) Life isn't risky; it is doomed to failure. We all die in the end. So, when we cower in fear of the greatness that our own discoveries can bring, we sacrifice unimaginable gain in order to protect mere (and temporary) pebbles. Maybe it is true that only the rich will be able to afford immortality...do you think it is therefor better that nobody ever be allowed to have it? That sounds more like petty selfishness than some noble moral sentiment. If you reflect objectively on the realities of our own evolution you will see that precisely this sort of unfairness is what has made our species what it is today. What if the apes of old had thought "some apes will be smarter than others, which just can't be tolerated, so we must ensure that we all stay dumb forever!" If that had happened, none of use would be here, nor would we have cell phones, trips off our planet, or conversations about morality and justice. Your very being already stands upon this foundation...it is naught but deleterious folly to seek the comfort of ignorance.

      Sixthly:

      E) This entire discussion is moot. The most wealthy, most moral, and greatest in number have never managed to stop the progression of our technological knowledge. Moira Gunn will not either.

    8. Re:The rich become a different species by Redlazer · · Score: 1
      It's a tough knot. It's not physical, like its made out to be - its philosophical.

      What right do we have to say "You can't spend money to improve yourself" to anyone, much less the right to say the opposite? As a society, it our duty to improve. The definition of "improve" is the meaning of life, if we knew what it was we where supposed to improve, we would all do it. Look at the stupid things people do when someone is just really convincing about it.

      The issue is that, up until this point, the really big sticking point is life.

      We simply don't understand it. It drives the frothy-natured scientists of the astral, biological, and other fundamental type sciences. They're not crazy, it's just that understanding the laws of the universe chip away at what life is about. The more we discover around us, the more we can reflect on our place in it. So far... it's pretty fucking bad news bears out there.

      Hence the frothed nature of genetics.

      Not crazy. In this case, there's even a missing gene, TFA suggested, right? I think there's a clear way that "everyone else" is, genetically speaking. I see no reason to not ask someone "Would you like to replace a missing gene to enable your seeing the fullest colour spectrum possible?", and then do that procedure if they chose to. Totally fucked healthcare systems aside, hopefully it wouldn't be too expensive.

      And what of other genetic diseases? We fight cancer and AIDS and all the rest, and have defeated a good many, but we don't really know what the bugs are capable of. That's ok - we've got a lot of smart people who really don't want to die, and good technology. To not do the one and only thing we can realistically do to remove debilitating genetic diseases?

      Wealth really does add an ugly spin to all this. But I do ask you this - do you think they could get away it, today? Done knowingly, it would make lots of people very mad.

      The option to be able to do such a thing is much more useful and helpful. The opportunity to be smarter? What if it led us down unlocked the parts of our brain we don't use? What if the remaining (what was it? 97%?) of brain we leave dark is needed to FIND the meaning of life.

      I'm trying to tell you, that work of this fundamental nature is way too valuable to not be discovered and researched like crazy. Sometimes, bad things happen, but we usually have, at the very least, an angry mob making a lot of noise about it.

      --
      Guns don't kill people, "with glowing hearts" kills people.
    9. Re:The rich become a different species by rockNme2349 · · Score: 1

      If this happens, Leiss worries that there will be one more genetic tweak: some of these elites will make their offspring genetically incompatible with others. Differences between classes will be transformed into differences between species.

      In a scenario like this, there is only one winner: The doctors

      --
      Sewage Treatment Facilities - "Our duty is clear."
    10. Re:The rich become a different species by WebmasterNeal · · Score: 1

      "Rich people can afford to extend their lifespans, make themselves beautiful, smarter, and so on."
      Rich people can already do this and do. It's capitalism at it's finest. Without this reward, there would be no reason to try to get rich and we'd all do the bare minimum.
      We could probably look at this from another angle, such as what if a child is born with AIDS and we have a cure for that.

      --
      "During My Service In The United States Congress, I Took The Initiative In Creating The Internet." -Al Gore
    11. Re:The rich become a different species by mellon · · Score: 1

      What makes you think that this is going to be expensive? Gene therapy really isn't that expensive, and if it's effective and in demand, it will get cheaper. In the long run, everyone will get it. Of course, if you make it illegal, nobody will get it. Is that a better outcome?

      What you *should* be worried about is genetically engineered serfs. Haven't you read A Brave New World?

    12. Re:The rich become a different species by Improv · · Score: 1

      I doubt these treatments will be expensive, unless the current IP regime continues. Genes are just data - we're not talking about building a bridge for each person.

      I'm pretty keen on improving things. I imagine Slashdot has its fair share of transhumanist-leaning people.

      --
      For every problem, there is at least one solution that is simple, neat, and wrong.
    13. Re:The rich become a different species by deetoy · · Score: 1

      "The problem is not that this would be wrong for the child (just assuming for the moment that there wouldn't be nasty unintended side-effects). The problem is the impact on society as a whole. Rich people can afford to extend their lifespans, make themselves beautiful, smarter, and so on. The elite become physically different from birth: physically, mentally, perhaps even morally superior. Imagine a society in which the rich lived twice as long. Do you think this would be just? Do you think freedom and stability could exist under these circumstances?"

      Is it really different to imposing Jail terms (shortening effective free lifespan) on persons who commit acts society had deemed unacceptable? (as opposed to giving $ to people who commit acts society seems valuable). Religions would have us believe the perfect being is immortal.

    14. Re:The rich become a different species by suomynonAyletamitlU · · Score: 1

      I don't know Leiss, but you remind me of a science fiction title by L.E. Modesitt, Jr called "Octagonal Raven."

      In it, mixed in with the main character's action sequences and his day job doing analysis for advertisers, is a story of a world where gene tweaked brains give you better reasoning ability, and the upper crust are trying to restrict access to politics and top schools to gene tweaked people (note the poor, as always, can't afford it and are left out), which means that the whole system is looking like it's about to get a whole lot more insular.

      Good book, good author. I recommend it if you're interested.

    15. Re:The rich become a different species by acheron12 · · Score: 1

      The elite become physically different from birth: physically, mentally, perhaps even morally superior.

      But if they're really smarter and morally superior, they'll be happy to pay to 'uplift' everyone else too. No really, humor me for a moment...

      It's difficult to imagine the true implications of genetic engineering, but I think it goes far beyond making yourself taller or smarter. We're talking about throwing vertical evolution out the window in favor of horizontal evolution. Want someone's genes? Previously, the only way you could get them (and only for your descendants, not yourself) was to mate with that person. But suddenly you can get them for yourself and your descendants, just by making a copy.

      And that changes everything.

      Because the only reason people compete along class lines and try to keep wealth "in the family" in the first place is that we're genetically programmed to do so. Why? Because people who invested in their families were more successful at passing on their genes.

      But wait, with genetic engineering, suddenly the best way to pass on your genes is simply to have good genes that people want to copy.

      In other words, once genes are just data, like ideas or, to borrow a Dawkins phrase, "memes", the Darwinian War of The Genes is over. Which means the only important game left in town is the War of Ideas.

      And the already weakened ideas of racism and classicism, having no basis outside the War of The Genes - will be among the first casualties in the new War of Ideas.

      --
      there is no god but truth, and reality is its prophet
    16. Re:The rich become a different species by unbug · · Score: 1

      Imagine a society in which the rich lived twice as long.

      You don't have to imagine it. The rich live significantly longer than the poor today. In fact, that has always been the case.

    17. Re:The rich become a different species by Bat+Dude · · Score: 1

      Reminds me of demolition man

    18. Re:The rich become a different species by jejones · · Score: 1

      Look at it this way: if Obamacare doesn't destroy the incentives for advances in medical technology, eventually whatever treatment it is will get cheaper. Meanwhile, all those EEEVIL rich people beta tested it for you, so by the time it's affordable, the bugs are all ironed out.

    19. Re:The rich become a different species by HJED · · Score: 1

      that argument makes no sense. you are trying to use "slippery slope" but that isn't addressing the question. how is curing color blindness any different than curing other diseases? what you are talking about is enhancements that no one has. most people see in color, to tell someone that is colorblind that they can't get a treatment because the technology could POTENTIALLY be used for something "morally wrong" is bs and has nothing to do with curing colorblindess. its unfortunate the people with the ethical problem aren't the ones suffering from colorblindness. you argue we shouldn't cure disease X because it could lead to technology that allows Z, something that has nothing to do with treating disease.

      ?Curing Colour blindness is different because in involves the modification of our genetic code, which is then passed on to the next generation and because colour blindness is not necessarily a disease, as it dose not impair bodily functions (the person can still see, just differently and they can still live, in nature they would still be avail to survive and compete with others it is only in our society which is designed for so called 'normal people')

      I would argue that as a genetic mutation it is in fact a natural proses of evaluation and should not be interfered with

      --
      null
    20. Re:The rich become a different species by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      "So if you've got a Darwin sticker on your car you shouldn't be in favor of any health care since "only the strong survive."

      Your conflating the evolution of societies with the evolution of individuals.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    21. Re:The rich become a different species by EsbenMoseHansen · · Score: 1

      That makes no sense. Why would you make your child genetically incompatible? As for the rest, there are 2 cases to consider. Either the improvements propagates, or they don't. If they do, the advantage will trickle down, allowing even the poorest better genes in the long run. Or it doesn't, in which case the advantage is no different from the advantages of better diet, education and resources in general. I'd even bet that a poor man can take a chance and sign up for experimental treatment ;)

      --
      Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by rulers as useful.
    22. Re:The rich become a different species by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      Rich people can afford to extend their lifespans, make themselves beautiful, smarter, and so on. The elite become physically different from birth: physically, mentally, perhaps even morally superior. Imagine a society in which the rich lived twice as long. Do you think this would be just? Do you think freedom and stability could exist under these circumstances?

      If the future is anything like today, then there would be massive subsidies for poor people to get their brain implants and skull cannons.

      Just like how poor people today don't pay taxes, and get subsidies on their phone service, computers, gas & electric, smog repair, mass transit, etc., with subsidies going all the way up to "free".

    23. Re:The rich become a different species by Joe+Tie. · · Score: 1

      I love the borg idea. I'd be running for assimilation in a second if it were reality. It's not destroying yourself, it's merging the drop of water you are with the ocean of intelligence. Always bugged me that trek characters didn't see how awesome that is.

      --
      Everything will be taken away from you.
  49. The Old Man On The Beach by westlake · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Yeah, the 'moral dilemma' is kinda silly. But why stop at curing colourblindness? When can I get my IR and UV vision?

    Here is a tale from one of the great Now-It-Can-Told memoirs of World War I:

    Of Spies &
    Stratagems by Stanley P. Lovell

    Lovell was the director of R&D for the OSS. The man who became Bill Donovan's Professor Moriarty. You'll find no better introduction to the real world of spy tech than here.

    A most important field of deception and concealment concerned the landing of spies and saboteurs on enemy occupied coastlines, and at the exact spot where he or she would be met by friendly personnel from the underground organizations. This proved to be a most difficult problem for us to solve. Such landings had to be made on nights with no moon.


    Early in the war fixed lights and blinkers were used on the shore to mark the rendezvous, but enemy airplanes and sur face vessels often spotted them. Many an agent and his reception committee of resistance fighters were surrounded, picked up and summarily shot.


    The ideal shore signal to guide the O.S.S. agent to the selected place was an ultra-violet beacon. A small UV bulb, powered by a single dry-cell battery, would flash intermittently for almost a year. The difficulty arose when we found that even a person with superior eyesight could pick out the ultra-violet signal in the blackness of night only from a distressingly short range. I could not detect it at all beyond one hundred feet. I was about to abandon the UV system of landing signal as worthless, when a surgeon specializing in cataract
    removals told me by chance that patients who had undergone that operation had extraordinary sensitivity to ultra-violet light. We asked for volunteers and tested several people whose cataracts had been removed. To our astonishment we found that they could see and pinpoint the little, flashing ultra
    violet light from over a mile away, whereas the rest of us could
    see nothing but inky blackness.


    Brave, elderly people, so selected, guided our operators
    infallibly to these normally invisible rendezvous. I am certain
    the Germans and the Japanese never had the faintest idea of
    how it was done.

  50. I think the same thing... by Pitr · · Score: 1

    ... of this article as I did of an episode of a TV show (ER or some similar medical show I only caught part of an episode of) where one of the main characters had a deaf child and the "specialist" they were recommended to for potential treatment asked them to consider the wonderful "gift" she had, or something like that. Like I said, I only caught part of the show, so if anyone knows the show/episode I'm talking about and has a clearer idea of what they were trying to say, feel free to chip in.

    As for what exactly I think of that suggestion, and this one; It's really dumb, and likely an offensive concept to anyone who feels held back by their disability. Go "morally protest" something important and stop telling people it's questionable to want to be able to perform at a "normal" level.

    --

    --Not to be worried, Pitr fix.
    1. Re:I think the same thing... by JesterJosh · · Score: 1

      It was House. http://cochlearimplantonline.com/site/?p=1204 "On the other hand, another doctor says, “Anything I can simulate with $3 earplugs isn’t a culture!” when discussing deafness as a disability vs. a culture with his colleagues. Though I understand his point, and his reaction is one that is very common among hearing people who have little/no experience with d/Deafness, I still felt that was insulting. Deaf Culture is not just about the inability to hear. I do think this was telling, though, because most people who are unfamiliar with the d/Deaf debates (aka the majority of the world!) have a similar reaction — “What!?! Of course it’s a disability not being able to hear! Of course you’d want to hear if you could!” That’s just the general public’s perception"

    2. Re:I think the same thing... by Pitr · · Score: 1

      Nope, that's not it. One of the main charachters in the show I'm thinking of had a deaf child. Like... still a baby, and born deaf.

      --

      --Not to be worried, Pitr fix.
    3. Re:I think the same thing... by JesterJosh · · Score: 1

      Hellen Keller? what do you call a tennis match between Helen Keller and Stevie Wonder? Endless Love

  51. NAACbP by Clayperion · · Score: 1

    Can't call it a disease...some organization will spring up (maybe the National Association for the Advancement of Colorblind People) and say that Red and Green M&M's are misleading and we should only eat the gray ones.....wait aren't they all gray?

  52. Asking the wrong question by Angst+Badger · · Score: 1

    I do my best not to be irritated by this line of questioning, not least because it is almost always a rhetorical question with an implied "No", or else just a stalling tactic. But the most irritating thing is that it's the wrong question.

    The question we should be asking is NOT whether we want to alter human genes. The real question here is whether *I* want to alter my own genes, and what the hell business that is of anyone's but mine and my doctor's. If the alteration extends to my reproductive cells, then there's a broader question, but I'd be perfectly willing to be sterilized as a precondition of curing any number of potential genetic disorders. As it happens, I had a vasectomy years ago, so I have long since ceased to be a concern for the human gene pool.

    Should we be curing [insert condition here]? No. Should we allow people to voluntarily seek out whatever medical treatment they need (or want, if they can afford it)? Yes.

    It's bad enough that we have religion interfering with people's medical choices. We don't need to open the door for idle philosophical speculation to deny people medical treatment.

    --
    Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
  53. Choosing genetic disorders by TeethWhitener · · Score: 1

    This brings up an interesting point. If we can use gene therapy to cure colorblindness or extend our senses, couldn't we also use it to give us certain disabilities to take advantage of handicapped laws? Or maybe we could change out our skin colors like the cool kids do with their ringtones. Or perhaps we could customize our abilities like we do our computers. Some of us may want a bare-bones system (literally?) or to be stripped of stuff we don't really need (like a complete vas deferns or Fallopian tube until we're ready to reproduce). I've seen a few commenters talking about a slippery slope, but what if you want to go skiing for a while (just to completely milk that metaphor)?

    1. Re:Choosing genetic disorders by TeethWhitener · · Score: 1

      Oh jeez, I in no way meant to imply that different skin colors were genetic disorders. Let's just put that flame out before it catches...

  54. Sometimes the color blind can be funny. by sparkeyjames · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Quite a number of years ago my brother in law had a car that was getting small rust spots all over it so he decided it needed to be fixed. He called me up to come help him as there were a lot of rust spots. I went over and it took us nearly all day to sand them down and prime them up. He said he would handle the final painting of them. It was a dark brown car. What I did not know was that he has green/brown color blindness. He called me up a couple of days later to say he had it all done. So I went over to take a look at the finished handy work. I damn near busted a gut from laughing because he now had a dark brown car with dark green spots all over it. At first he would not believe me so he called my sister out (she had not seen the car since we started the repairs) and the look on her face and the question "How come there are dark green spots all over it?" started me laughing all over again.

    1. Re:Sometimes the color blind can be funny. by darenw · · Score: 1

      How is it that he was old enough to own a car and all, but not know he was colorblind? Don't the colorblind usually know about it from a young age?

  55. Language is Culture by fullfactorial · · Score: 1

    'Being deaf is not about being disabled, or medically incomplete - it's about being part of a linguistic minority. We're proud, not of the medical aspect of deafness, but of the language we use and the community we live in.'

    Deafness is a completely different issue from color-blindness (or even regular blindness) because LANGUAGE IS CULTURE. Almost every meaningful social experience you have is had in the context of language.

    Think about losing every story, every song, every conversation you've had because your language has been rendered obsolete. On some level I'm sure everyone in deaf culture would like to be able to hear. But many of them won't trade hearing if it means their favorite songs, poems, and stories will not be passed on. There's a great movie about this called Sound and Fury

    1. Re:Language is Culture by davidwr · · Score: 1

      "language is culture" - this has a lot of truth to it.

      However, nothing says that American Sign Language or other sign languages can't be put into written form. Music, dance, and spoken language can, albeit with some loss of subtly and emphasis (reading MLK I Have A Dream speech just isn't the same as hearing them on tape or seeing them in a film recording). Yes, I know deaf people generally use the same written language as their hearing counterparts, but given that ASL is not the same as English, there needs to be a way to record this on paper and have good translation dictionaries that not only provide written-English-word-for-written-sign translations but provide a deep enough understanding so scholars a thousand years from now who understand 21st-century English can understand the cultural artifacts left in 21st-century ASL. Whether the written signs are done as a pictograph or as the closest-corresponding English word or phrase is not important, what is important is that as little is possible is lost between the actual signed speech and the written form of the same.

      Otherwise, we are at the mercy of video recordings, which are far less likely to be played back a thousand years than carefully-stored paper.

      --
      Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    2. Re:Language is Culture by frith01 · · Score: 1

      Strangely enough, I have seen a lot of deaf people who know how to read & write! !

      I am certain this means they can pass on their stories.

  56. A completly different viewpoint by Mystify432 · · Score: 1

    On the other hand, I could argue that it is more morally justifiable to genetically modify a person to fix flaws than other methods we currently employ. Take glasses as an example. Poor eyesight is a severe disadvantage that is all but negated by the simple application of eyeglasses. By doing this we are circumventing natural selection, and what is a trait that would normally be weighed down is allowed to propagate almost equally, and become widespread, polluting the gene pool. This leads to genetic degradation as a race. However, if you genetically alter someone to remove a flaw, this is passed on to children and the flaw is removed, resulting in a stronger gene pool. Why should being counterproductive with natural selection be morally right and being truly beneficial be morally wrong?

  57. Crazy talk by uncoveror · · Score: 1

    No, of course it is not immoral to cure a disease. Who asked the stupid question, a Jehovah's Witness? A Christian Scientist? Such crazy talk could not have come from anyone but a religious nut who thinks God wants you to suffer, or he wouldn't have punished you for your sins with a disease. People who believe since nonsense would have kept us in caves, or caused our extinction if they had run the world from the dawn of man until now.

    --
    The Uncoveror: It's the real news.
  58. Re:what 4 colors? by maxume · · Score: 1

    There are 3 primary colors because human eyes are most sensitive to 3 particular wavelengths of light.

    Add sensitivity to more wavelengths of light and you get more primary colors.

    --
    Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
  59. Envy is such an ugly emotion by George_Ou · · Score: 5, Insightful

    People can afford to be different today and I don't see any problem with it. I don't hate wealthy people because they can afford nice cars, attain beautiful women (often more than one), and receive more specialized care. I see nothing wrong with their success and I hope to be one of those people someday. What I would hate is for someone like you to tell me that I can't strive to differentiate because it might upset a few people and make them envious.

    1. Re:Envy is such an ugly emotion by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      People can afford to be different today and I don't see any problem with it. I don't hate wealthy people because they can afford nice cars, attain beautiful women (often more than one), and receive more specialized care. I see nothing wrong with their success and I hope to be one of those people someday. What I would hate is for someone like you to tell me that I can't strive to differentiate because it might upset a few people and make them envious.

      If I were a rich person of the Gattaca future, I'd offer all of the poor free anti-envy gene mods. "There you go, now you're happy with your lot in life." Save your genes, George_Ou, someone might pay a lot for them in the future.

    2. Re:Envy is such an ugly emotion by syousef · · Score: 1

      People can afford to be different today and I don't see any problem with it. I don't hate wealthy people because they can afford nice cars, attain beautiful women (often more than one), and receive more specialized care. I see nothing wrong with their success and I hope to be one of those people someday.

      Attain beautiful women? More than one? And you plan to do this by reading slashdot?

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
  60. If it happens in nature by ericcj · · Score: 1

    It's natural

  61. Society has already voted on this one by Malibee · · Score: 1

    Genetic manipulation is the logical continuation of the school of thought that brought you Ritalin, Prozac, and the host of other psychiatric medications.

    It's probably not a bad idea to rehash the arguments for and against such things, but the precedent has been set.

  62. Gattaca! by Nyckname · · Score: 1

    Gattaca!

    Gattaca!

    Gattaca!

  63. I don't understand the question by Punto · · Score: 1

    could it be morally wrong? no. in fact it would be morally right.

    --

    --
    Stay tuned for some shock and awe coming right up after this messages!

  64. I hate being colourblind by nintendoeats · · Score: 1

    If I am denied a cure to this frustrating debilitation because somebody thinks that it will lead to Gattica, I am going to track them down, take off one of their arms and tell them that prosthetics are unethical. And painkillers. Seriously, It sucks. Be glad if you don't have it, join me in moderate irritation if you do.

    1. Re:I hate being colourblind by hax4bux · · Score: 1

      I'm w/you. What a stoopid question. The cure isn't mandatory.

      Being R/G color blind got me booted out of electronics in the Navy and it has kept me from a commercial flying career. If there were therapy, I would take it.

      I don't mind being color blind, but I don't like being excluded because of it.

      Note to FAA: I have the best night vision of anybody I know, and I fly after dark w/confidence. So there.

  65. No. by composer777 · · Score: 1

    No.

  66. as long as its voluntary by DeadRat4life · · Score: 1

    i mean, there are certain jobs you cant do being color blind, not to mention its just helpful to see a broader spectrum of colors. Its not like (cosmetic) plastic surgery where you just want to look younger or closer to societies, rather fucked up unrealistic, standard of beauty. That is trying to "normalize" and that is morally wrong. Helping people see more colors is helping people see more colors. We do have a problem with the loss and persecution of individuality (whether its a lifestyle choice or something from birth that makes one unique), but this is not the issue to start a discussion about it over.

  67. I fail to see the conflict by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

    If a patient wishes to have the same number of senses as his neighbor, then it seems perfectly reasonable to offer a solution.

    Being unable to sense the difference between some colors is the lack of a sense. But it also must be up to the individual if they would receive the treatment or not.

    This is different than having yourself modified to have super strength or unnatural infravision, because it is something outside typical (or in some cases ANY) human abilities. I'm not saying I'm for or against enhancements beyond what nature provides, I'd just like to make sure we can agree that it is a completely different topic of discussion. Maybe it's a matter of degrees, but asking for a piece of birthday cake when everyone else got one is generally considered reasonable. Asking for TWO pieces of cake where others only received one is considered greedy. Cultural bias perhaps, but it is a viewpoint that is common over many human cultures (if not all of them)

    Don't be greedy with your genetic modifications.

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  68. Price reduction by nten · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As the rich pay the early adopter costs, the companies will continue to come out with better mods, reducing the price of the previous ones. The price for the older mods will soon come down enough for middle class folks to mod themselves, and eventually enough to be covered by insurance plans as standard. At least in the world we should strive to create, that is how it would work. There is nothing wrong with the wealthy getting it first, they pay more for it and thereby allow for a higher (if unequal) quality of life for all. It worked that way with lasik in the US. I'm not sure if it worked that way because it was an optional elective surgery so it wasn't the "pay-up or die" situation that allows for higher prices, or whether it was that the insurance companies were completely uninvolved, or for some other reason that the hops have hidden from me.

    --
    refactor the law, its bloated, confusing and unmaintainable.
  69. You are missing the point by Geof · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't hate wealthy people because they can afford nice cars, attain beautiful women (often more than one), and receive more specialized care. I see nothing wrong with their success and I hope to be one of those people someday. What I would hate is for someone like you to tell me that I can't strive to differentiate because it might upset a few people and make them envious.

    You are completely misunderstanding the argument. What you seem to be describing is a form of meritocracy. The American dream you describe assumes that with hard work anyone can succeed. Anyone could be smart, anyone could be hard-working. The worst-case of the society I am describing is one without that possibility. It is utterly unmeritocratic: no matter how hard you work, you would be unable to succeed because you were genetically inferior. You fail because you simply aren't smart enough, or haven't enough stamina, or lack the inbuilt emotional intelligence or what have you. The elite would be like an entrenched aristocracy, except instead of being merely more wealthy, they would also be physically and mentally privileged - and they would pass those advantages on to their offspring. Those advantages could be insurmountable.

    Also, I guarantee that the social barriers created on the basis of physical differences would be at least as much an impediment to success. If the rich look like supermen, there will be intense prejudice against anyone who obviously lacks those advantages. Prejudice would run rampant because it actually had a basis in fact.

    Historically the aristocracy were in fact physically different. The rich ate a diet including meat and a variety of other foods. The poor had only a limited diet of nutritionally incomplete foods - with insufficient protein, for example. Imagining eating a gruel of millet and turnips every day. The difference between rich and poor was manifested physically. You could tell a poor person just by looking at him: his status was physically marked on his body. In a physical conflict the rich would be likely to win simply because they were physically superior.

    You are also injecting an ideological implication when you talk about "hate." I never said anything about hating wealthy people. I spoke only of the kind of society such engineering would produce. If the poor could see that they had virtually no chance to succeed no matter how hard they worked, there would be constant unrest. As there was in the middle ages, when peasant revolts were a constant fact of life.

    1. Re:You are missing the point by mhwombat · · Score: 1

      I'm confused by this argument. Wasn't the whole concern the idea of technology that would let people pay to improve their genes? That sounds more like the "American dream" you describe, not less. We already have a situation where one person can be born with less genetic advantages than another. Currently, however hard they work, they are not going to be able to change this. I'm not sure why you say "anyone could be smart" - right now that simply isn't true. With genetic technologies it could be. I'm not saying I'm convinced this is going to be a good thing but it does sound like the ability to buy better genes would be aligned with the ideal you describe, not opposed to it.

    2. Re:You are missing the point by Z34107 · · Score: 1

      Let's assume that splicing becomes so incredibly beneficial that it's required to do any meaningful work - you can't get a job at all with inferior genes because you just couldn't perform.

      In that case, why wouldn't companies provide it for free to all of their workers? If strength lets you produce $100 worth of widgets an hour instead of $50, the ROI would be rather high. It would be like any other kind of investment.

      In fact, it could be good for the worker. A lot of capital is labor replacing - you can buy one machine to do the work of 100 workers. If you can augment the worker - say, the machine is only as good as 50 workers now - that completely changes the demand for machines versus people.

      --
      DATABASE WOW WOW
    3. Re:You are missing the point by Krahar · · Score: 1

      The difference in genes we have now already make it so that there are things most people cannot do that some can do, and these genes are passed on from the successful to their children. The world you are describing is exactly the world you already live in. Of course environment plays a role too, but it would continue to do so in a world with much better gene technology, and it would matter in exactly the same kind of way that it does today. In fact gene technology could do exactly the opposite of what you propose. We already live in the world you describe, and gene technology could make it so that we would no longer live in that world. Today some people have tremendous advantages because of their genes. There is no reason that gene technology could not be ubiquitous the way, say, mobile phones are now. Then everyone would be playing on a level playing field, and is that not exactly what you are asking for?

    4. Re:You are missing the point by martin-boundary · · Score: 4, Insightful
      You're making the mistake(?) of thinking this won't happen. Do you really think that wealthy people today, and tomorrow, do not intend to do just what you describe? Do you think you can stop them? Do you think anybody can stop them? All it requires are private medical facilities filled with people who are willing to secretly break laws for money.

      So my question for you is: if you outlaw genetic enhancements, won't only outlaws (=rich people) have genetic enhancements?

      The only way to prevent *that* is to regulate early and make *affordable* genetic alterations the norm.

    5. Re:You are missing the point by jmknsd · · Score: 1

      You also need to consider the other part of a physical manifestation of these theoretical engineering procedures, everyone would be able to tell that the rich were keeping such things for themselves. They might be smarter and capable of living longer, but I don't see them being bulletproof.

      The masses would fight for something like this, and it won't be like in the middle ages(At least in the States) where the wealthy were capable of easily quelling an uprising; it would be a bloody mess.

      I can see it drastically changing things, but eventually it would come down in price. There might be an elite class that is one step ahead of everyone else, but it would even itself out.

    6. Re:You are missing the point by Maelwryth · · Score: 1

      "It is utterly unmeritocratic: no matter how hard you work, you would be unable to succeed because you were genetically inferior. You fail because you simply aren't smart enough, or haven't enough stamina, or lack the inbuilt emotional intelligence or what have you"
      No, that's evolution.

      The question asked is rather easy actually. As per normal turn it around. Is it moral to refuse treatment to a colour blind person knowing that you can fix the perceived problem?

      Oh, and btw, the universe doesn't give a shit. There is no god. Morals are just another social construct to protect the inferior and the dominant.

      --
      I reserve the write to mangle english.
    7. Re:You are missing the point by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      The area I am worried about though is the social desire to alleviate hardship and make life nice for our children. While this is a laudable goal, nothing replaces the gains made by blood, sweat, and tears. Our muscles require resistance to provide us with physical strength. Our "spirits" (in the sense of mental and emotional composition) require resistance to provide us with strength of character and spirit.

      We should not take away these things.

      I have a personal horse in this race. I have fairly severe ADD, and I can tell you the difficulties I went through as a child (being the one who was ALWAYS picked on, who had severe trouble with school work despite being obviously bright, etc) helped make me into a better (and even happier) person.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    8. Re:You are missing the point by Kelbear · · Score: 1

      Society should have class mobility I agree. It would be a shame for someone to never realize his true potential because he was never given the opportunity to realize it.

      It's a problem that's already with us in the world today, but we have improved on it a great deal. Educational opportunity is the social equalizer of our times, but not all countries have produced 99% literacy and readily available public education. There are success stories like my teacher whose parents were migrant workers picking fruit, while she obtained a PHD and tenured position in a university and her sister became a lawyer. On the other hand, you have Ugandan children learning the alphabet from goat droppings shaped into letters on the ground(but it's good they are at least able to learn English!)

      As for genetic engineering, the solution is similar. Provide public genetic engineering so everyone at least gets a basic foundation from which to leverage upward. It will be expensive and complex, but the public education system wasn't always around either. It won't be perfect, and neither is our public education system, because there are always the privileged few. I certainly wouldn't be where I am today if my parents weren't middle class. The roadblock for it in the future won't be economic, since given a long enough maturation period, we'll be able to do basic changes cheaply. It'll come down to politics in the end, since there are both strong pros and cons to consider.

    9. Re:You are missing the point by jejones · · Score: 1

      "Anyone could be smart, anyone could be hard-working. The worst-case of the society I am describing is one without that possibility. It is utterly unmeritocratic: no matter how hard you work, you would be unable to succeed because you were genetically inferior."

      Isn't that how it is now, save that the genes are distributed randomly?

    10. Re:You are missing the point by sincewhen · · Score: 1

      Dr Seuss already warned us about this:


      Now, the Star-Belly Sneetches
      Had bellies with stars.
      The Plain-Belly Sneetches
      Had none upon thars.

      --
      -- Braden's law of data: All data spends some of its lifetime in an excel spreadsheet.
    11. Re:You are missing the point by HJED · · Score: 1

      As for genetic engineering, the solution is similar. Provide public genetic engineering so everyone at least gets a basic foundation from which to leverage upward. It will be expensive and complex, but the public education system wasn't always around either. It won't be perfect, and neither is our public education system, because there are always the privileged few. I certainly wouldn't be where I am today if my parents weren't middle class. The roadblock for it in the future won't be economic, since given a long enough maturation period, we'll be able to do basic changes cheaply. It'll come down to politics in the end, since there are both strong pros and cons to consider.

      So you are suggesting that we all get the same compulsory identical genetic engineering? This is certainly a bad idea, it would destroy individuality and would be very risky as you could be modifying the whole human race's genes in a way that will ultimately lead to our extinction.(The Asgard from Stargate, show this point very well)

      --
      null
    12. Re:You are missing the point by fyoder · · Score: 1

      You seem to be assuming that the superior people will continue to believe that capitalism is the bee's knees and that genetic enhancement should cost a lot. What if instead they rejected capitalism and created a utopian society and extended genetic enhancement to anyone who wanted it?

      I've hoped we'd get there one day, and our current time of gross socioeconomic inequality would be looked back upon the same way we look back at slavery, but I figured it would take evolution not revolution to get there -- in other words sometime thousands of years into the future. You can have a revolution in the name of an ideal society and wind up with Stalin. It ain't gonna happen until humans become better people. In the meantime we're stuck with capitalism, because it kinda sorta works to establish order, imperfect though it is. If anyone can come up with a better system that won't produce Stalins or stifle progress, then let us know.

      But with genetic enhancement, perhaps a utopian society could emerge not in millennia, but merely several generations.

      --
      Loose lips lose spit.
    13. Re:You are missing the point by ultranova · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You seem to be assuming that the superior people will continue to believe that capitalism is the bee's knees and that genetic enhancement should cost a lot. What if instead they rejected capitalism and created a utopian society and extended genetic enhancement to anyone who wanted it?

      Or what if they embrace capitalism, start selling enchantments cheaply enough that the masses can afford them - you know, like powerful personal computers are sold these days - and perhaps even offer to pay for enhancing their own workers for the productivity boost?

      Capitalism has a lot of downsides, but keeping things that are cheap to produce out of the hands of the masses isn't amongst them.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    14. Re:You are missing the point by ultranova · · Score: 1

      The area I am worried about though is the social desire to alleviate hardship and make life nice for our children. While this is a laudable goal, nothing replaces the gains made by blood, sweat, and tears.

      Bullshit. Lots of people accomplish great things without having shed bucketfulls of any of those. And those who suffered and then accomplished a lot did so despite, not because that suffering.

      Our muscles require resistance to provide us with physical strength.

      There is already a mutation in the wild that removes that need; it makes muscles grow to maximum strength whether they're used or not.

      Our "spirits" (in the sense of mental and emotional composition) require resistance to provide us with strength of character and spirit.

      Perhaps. I'm not convinced that that couldn't also be changed. It should also be noted that too much hardship will simply break your spirit and character.

      I have a personal horse in this race. I have fairly severe ADD, and I can tell you the difficulties I went through as a child (being the one who was ALWAYS picked on, who had severe trouble with school work despite being obviously bright, etc) helped make me into a better (and even happier) person.

      How curious. Because I know someone who was bullied, and as a result went from a bright, cheerful and confident kid to a complete ruin, unable to land a job, unalbe to form relationships, unable to even walk on the streets without meds, etc.

      But hey, can't make an omelette without breaking eggs, eh?

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    15. Re:You are missing the point by makomk · · Score: 1

      "The American dream you describe assumes that with hard work anyone can succeed. Anyone could be smart, anyone could be hard-working."

      The American dream is a con. Sure, anyone can be smart and hard working, but if your local school system is underfunded and understaffed, your local libraries are unreachable, and internet is an expensive luxury, what are you going to do with that?

      America actually has fairly atrocious social mobility compared to (say) the rest of Europe - if you're born in the lower classes, the chances are very high you'll die there.

    16. Re:You are missing the point by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      I am curious:

      When you suggest I am callous in terms of suggesting I was better off for the hardships I have gone through, and suggest I am advocating a point of view that one cannot make an omelet without breaking a few eggs, aren't you advocating breaking eggs in a different way? I.e. taking away some level of hardship on the off chance that the person might fail would rob of the Sir Richard Bransons of the world who attribute their successes to having to find other ways of coping with neurological disorders.....

      I suggest that you are not trying to avoid cracking eggs, you are just trying to crack the exceptionally successful eggs. Why?

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    17. Re:You are missing the point by Kavafy · · Score: 1

      "Anyone could be smart, anyone could be hard-working. The worst-case of the society I am describing is one without that possibility. It is utterly unmeritocratic: no matter how hard you work, you would be unable to succeed because you were genetically inferior."

      Isn't that how it is now, save that the genes are distributed randomly?

      And that is the whole point. By getting rid of that random distribution, you are adding a whole new transgenerational effect. So now rich parents can not only buy better toys, education, food and childcare for their kids, but also better genetic attributes. That is a serious worry for anyone who believes that we should all be born with an equal opportunity for success.

  70. Color "blindness" also a survival advantage by TaleSpinner · · Score: 1

    So-called color "blind" men have frequently been shown to have advantages in seeing through camouflage in a natural environment - a useful trait for hunting. Like sickle-cell anemia and attention "deficit disorder", these "disabilities" turn out to have survival advantages for the species. In sickle-cell just one copy of the gene makes the owner more resistant to malaria, and so is a net win for species survival even though those who inherit two of them die. Attention "deficit disorder" - a short attention span and high distractability - makes it possible to be more aware of everything going on in the environment around you - like the prey lurking under a bush, the odor of a big cat, or that (possibly fatally-infected) fly landing on you, all things that a highly focused individual might miss in concentrating on chipping his flint. Many such traits are still in the gene pool for a reason.

  71. Re:what 4 colors? by OrangeCatholic · · Score: 1

    Are there? If light is a continuous spectrum, why should any of them be "primary?"

    You realize God has no understanding of the word "blue." Blue is a wavelength, or rather a set of wavelengths. Because humans have 3 visual cones, we perceive as "colors" the cones themselves and their respective overlaps. You would figure 5 named colors, but of course there's 7 or 8...or 32 million...whatever.

    Point is, color perception is an artifact of the primate brain. Cue a Matrix quote about tasting chicken.

  72. Depends on the genetics of the trait/disease by izomiac · · Score: 1

    Fixing single gene defects, like color blindness, is like changing a bad capacitor. Big deal. A keyboard with a broken button isn't really valuable* to anyone (unless that broken key is caps lock and it's a gift).

    Changing polygenic traits like height, IQ, sexual orientation, or predisposition to obesity is completely different. Those traits are a result of many genes interacting. Changing them would be like rewiring the whole circuit. Besides being technologically infeasible, the ethical issues apply particularly strongly here.

    * I mean this as in the "trait" doesn't really enrich the person who has it, not that the person is worthless. I suppose color blind people see the world differently, but if they want this procedure then I see no reason to deny it to them.

  73. Re:Stupid by Lord+Ender · · Score: 1

    "Deaf culture" seems like a cult to me. And since people are already permitted to refuse medicine for their children on religious grounds, the deaf will be able to mistreat their kids legally as soon as they do the paperwork to become a religion.

    --
    A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
  74. NO! by wolrahnaes · · Score: 1

    Simple, no it wouldn't. It's curing a disability. A minor one by most standards, but a disability no less.

    Some people think this would lead to "curing" normal differences like height, build, race, etc. The way I look at it, the way to distinguish difference from disability is whether it would affect the person if they were stranded on a desert island. Deaf? Color blind? Unable to smell? Disability. Shorter than average or a different skin color? Difference. (note that height can fall in to disability when taken to extremes, I'm talking normal variation levels)

    I'm also with the poster from #31635162 in that deaf parents who actively try for deaf children are evil and should not be allowed to have kids.

    --
    I used to get high on life, but I developed a tolerance. Now I need something stronger.
  75. There is no objective normal by Geof · · Score: 2, Insightful

    No, at some point "fixing things" turns into "not fixing things", and that's pretty easy to differentiate. "Fixing things" is, by default, "improving things", at least for those who suffer from being broken.

    I don't agree that it is easy to differentiate. In some cases perhaps. But in most there is no objective standard for what is "normal." Our idea of normal is cultural, and some people draw the lines in very different places (there is extensive scholarship on this point). Genetics are not normative: evolution makes no value judgments about which characteristics are good and which are bad. Some turn out to be more successful in a given context, but that doesn't make them "good" in a human sense.

    I recall a news report that claimed introversion was a disorder that afflicted 25% of the population. Well, maybe in America. In China, if anything it would be extroversion that was considered abnormal.

    1. Re:There is no objective normal by Kral_Blbec · · Score: 1

      For sight, there IS an objective standard for what is normal. The ability to differentiate between all the colors of the rainbow. Done. Sold. Whamo. If you can't tell the difference between red and green, then we can fix it so you can. Your example about introversion is irrelevant because, as you say, there is no standard normal. Indeed, I would be curious to know if the report focused that introversion is a disorder that afflicted 25% of the population, or if it was a disorder that afflicted 25% of the population.

    2. Re:There is no objective normal by HJED · · Score: 1

      No, there is an accept standard for what the majority of the human race view as normal sight, however if we extend this to all the animal kingdom or even just mammals the so called normal changes. Normal is an abstraction and a point of view, it is impossible for it to be objective.

      By changing someone's colour-blindness to the norm you could be destroying a gene that in the future becomes necessary for the survival of the human race. Remember males pass their current genes on, not the ones they are born with and if the modification occurs in the womb, early on then females would also pass on this gene (see Gatica).

      Genetic mutations or abnormalities are a natural part of evaluation and we defiantly don't understand our genes well enough to mess with them.

      --
      null
    3. Re:There is no objective normal by Kral_Blbec · · Score: 1

      Ugg, so now we have to start worrying about the differences between animals and humans? Do I really care how good a hawk can see? Are we talking about turning people into animals?

      In other words, other than as part of a ridiculous straw man arguement, why would we extend this to all the animal kingdom?

  76. I'll do it... but... by retech · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It's been the single most defining element to my life. Colorblindness shaped my world view from my early youth and has only served to reinforce that view. I'm colorblind. Typically Red Green and I've known since right around my 6th birthday. My grandfather and older brother were as well and when I started getting things wrong I experimented to see if I was or not. I'd pick crayons that had a basic title: Skyblue, Brick Red, Lemon Yellow and I'd find a selection of men and women (teachers, aunts, uncles), without the label, I'd ask them: What color is this crayon? I found if I asked 10 separate people I got 10 answers. If I asked 10 people in a group I got about 4-6 answers and an argument amongst them. One Christmas gathering I did this and it ended up turning into a huge family argument. Granted they're a bit dysfunctional. This taught me that we clearly live in our own shell of a world. Each of our perceptions are unique unto us. I find it a miracle that we've ever communicated or agreed on anything at all. Men already see 30% less of the spectrum than women, yet a colorblind man will insist (very often) that he's correct. I sincerely doubt that any two people have a 100% understanding or perception agreement on anything they experience together. If I were ever a juror and had to decide on a case that was based on eyewitness testimony I do not care how I felt, I'd dismiss it entirely. We are grossly flawed in thinking there is a universality to our understanding of our life. We live in bubbles only barely seeing into someone's bubble.

    1. Re:I'll do it... but... by carolfromoz · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You're right. I've noticed I ofen disagree with others on the gree-blue spectrum. None of us can be at all sure about what another person's brain is seeing.

    2. Re:I'll do it... but... by khallow · · Score: 1

      If I were ever a juror and had to decide on a case that was based on eyewitness testimony I do not care how I felt, I'd dismiss it entirely.

      Why? That is not the role of a juror or indeed a rational person to discard evidence a priori, especially given that your claim for universally rejecting eyewitness testimony is that there's no universal knowledge. Heal thyself, physician.

    3. Re:I'll do it... but... by davidwr · · Score: 1

      yet a colorblind man will insist (very often) that he's correct.

      Ah, that's because he's a man! *cue rimshot*

      What color is this crayon?

      This is because of the lack of a reference. People's memories are fallible and as you pointed out, we remember things differently. Also, thinks look different in different lighting. If I "remember" seeing a brick red crayon under sunlight, and you show me an unlabeled brick red crayon in an indoor or non-outdoor-color-temperature incandescent or worse, non-white light, I'm liable to say it's something other than brick red.

      On the other hand, if you had a pack of crayons handy and you asked me to find the matching crayon, I and most other people could do so very easily. A color-blind person might have trouble if two crayons in the pack looked identical to him. Likewise, if the room lighting was non-white and as a result two different crayons were indistinguishable to the average person, the average person would have the same difficulty. Walk into a room lit by single-color lights sometime and try figuring out what is what color. Even if there are only two lights lit, say, red and green, people will have difficulties telling certain colors apart.

      --
      Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  77. I suffer from colorblindness by Sefi915 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm not grayscale colorblind. But I have trouble, at times, depending on context, differentiating between blue-green, blue-purple, green-brown, brown-red, red-green, purple-gray, gray-green... I'm sure you get the picture.

    I'd love to be able to tell when my cellphone or DS Lite needs charging just by the light of the power indicator.
    I'd love to be able to tell my girlfriend that the red of her blouse goes great with the highlights in her hair.
    I wish I could see those Magic Image thingies.
    I hate picking out "the wrong shirt" on St. Patty's Day.

    I can't tell resistor colors apart - I had to get help in that class in school.
    I had to tell a Navy Sub recruiter that I am colorblind. He stopped calling.
    I can't play a lot of video games because of color problems. Metroid Prime, Devil May Cry. Had issues in certain zones in Everquest; still have issues in certain zones in World of Warcraft.

    It would make my life easier.

  78. I see the problem by George_Ou · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "The American dream you describe assumes that with hard work anyone can succeed."

    I am sorry that I actually believe this due to the fact that I am an immigrant and never learned the entitlement mindset. "The worst-case of the society I am describing is one without that possibility. It is utterly unmeritocratic: no matter how hard you work, you would be unable to succeed because you were genetically inferior. You fail because you simply aren't smart enough, or haven't enough stamina, or lack the inbuilt emotional intelligence or what have you. The elite would be like an entrenched aristocracy, except instead of being merely more wealthy, they would also be physically and mentally privileged - and they would pass those advantages on to their offspring. Those advantages could be insurmountable."

    Has this ever *not* been the case throughout the world? Women for example will rarely mate with someone shorter than themselves. Women look for mates that can provide security (or at least the best they can attract). Men look for healthy (beautiful) looking women. Would you rather turn this upside down? I've personally seen this kind of nonsense in communist China where janitors were given the title of professor or doctor while the professors were drowned and doctors were sent to work the fields. I've personally suffered from this kind of upside-down society as have millions of other Chinese people

    Technology is actually the great equalizer as the cost of technology comes down. When in the history of man kind could anyone publish written or video content to the entire world on a shoestring budget? If humans could buy technology to improve themselves - and businesses will strive to ensure that the masses could afford the technology while still earning a healthy profit - it would equalize the difference.

    1. Re:I see the problem by Frenchman113 · · Score: 1

      Are you serious? The first thing I would do if I managed to become a genetically superior aristocrat is to restrict the availability of superior genetics to the chosen and force all others to submit to genetic therapy that would forever destroy theirs, and any of their offspring's ability to ever threaten me or my descendants. In the world you describe, that is the ONLY possible outcome, and in fact, the only MORAL outcome in the world you describe.

    2. Re:I see the problem by TheFaithfulStone · · Score: 1

      I am sorry that I actually believe this due to the fact that I am an immigrant and never learned the entitlement mindset.

      Or reading comprehension apparently. It wouldn't matter how smart and capable you were, since you couldn't afford the necessary genetic modifications, you'd be a peasant. The sort of genetic dystopia he's describing would create a permanent genetic underclass with no hope of upward social mobility. You'd be a perpetual Delta, but without the lovely soma. You're saying you believe in social mobility - he's telling you if Paris Hilton and all of her issue for all eternity could be guaranteed an IQ of 150, that such a thing simply would not exist.

    3. Re:I see the problem by RazorSharp · · Score: 1

      "Technology is actually the great equalizer as the cost of technology comes down."

      The entire process of costs coming down is the process in which the genetic aristocracy would form. You're so forward looking that you forgot to account for step B between A and C (to use a nifty example everyone should relate to). If, as the parent says, "the rich become a different species," then it seems unlikely that these technological wonders would ever be available to all.

      Furthermore, even if costs came down to the point of being available to all, there are several ethical questions left on the table. Once people live much longer, how do we control the population? Your native country is struggling with this problem today. Individuality also becomes a main concern. If we all looked like supermodels and had similar physical abilities, would we retain our sense of identity? What would become of sports?

      Many of these concerns run parallel to existing ethical issues such as plastic surgery, abortion, and distributive justice. It's for this reason that I believe that this debate should start with something unthreatening such as colorblindness. Just because "curing colorblindness" doesn't sound threatening doesn't sound dangerous or morally questionable doesn't mean we should dismiss it as such. This is a case where the means may not justify the ends. I hate to use the slippery slope argument, but the reason Ms. Gunn is uneasy about the process is because it very well may be a slippery slope (remember, a slippery slope is only a fallacy when the argument isn't actually a slippery slope, it's just made to look like one).

      "If humans could buy technology to improve themselves. . . " - If is a big word in that sentence. The question being asked is whether this is an actual improvement. If genetic modifications are objectively unethical then any genetic modification, whether it be as nominal as curing colorblindness or as extreme as making one fly, will be a detriment to the human. It seems that as long as the ethical status of genetic enhancement is in question that we shouldn't rush to take advantage of it, especially for something as petty as curing colorblindness. Personally, I have big ethical problems with plastic surgery (for cosmetic reasons, I have no problem with someone who survived being shot in the face getting it restructured), but I doubt it will ever be outlawed because we've allowed it to become entrenched in our society before we considered the ethical implications that there's probably no way of banning it.

      Here's a great read that discusses the dangers of such technologies much more in depth and eloquently than I ever could: http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/8.04/joy.html

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
    4. Re:I see the problem by George_Ou · · Score: 1

      I've never bought into the type of pessimistic view of technology that Bill Joy espouses. I think it's a terrible form of self hate among some technologists. If these technology inventors really feel the way they feel, they should stop inventing things. Taken to the most extreme, they become crazed Ted Kaczynski type killers.

    5. Re:I see the problem by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      The problem is that the American Dream simply isn't true. For most people even if they work hard they won't become rich. Most businesses fail, and very few people have genuinely original and useful ideas that they can market.

      The reality is that most people will spend their entire lives working for other people. Sure, advancement and higher salaries are available as their career progresses but they will never become rich. In fact, most people who are rich were born into money, the proportion who are self-made is pretty low.

      Once you realise that you can see why it makes sense to vote for stuff which benefits everyone rather than just those lucky few who "made it". It's not about entitlement, it's about everyone making their lives better by working together. We all want to be rich but it makes more sense to try and improve your current and likely future situation rather than hoping you are one of the 0.001% who get lucky.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  79. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  80. save me by sacrilicious · · Score: 1

    'Are we trying to 'normalize' humans to a threshold of experience?'

    Is it morally wrong to install toilets? Are we just trying to 'normalize' humans to a common experience of not dying of dysentery?

    --
    - First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
    1. Re:save me by JSBiff · · Score: 1

      Is it morally wrong to prevent premature babies, or infants with congenital birth defects from dieing immediately after birth, like they would 'in nature'? Is it wrong to craft eyewear for the nearsighted? Is it wrong to use anti-biotics to prevent people from dieing of infections?

      Honestly, I think whoever posed this question is a *complete dumbass*.

      I would go further and say *enhancing* people, if they choose it, would not be wrong. After all, we are, by-and-large completely disabling the Darwinistic mechanisms of natural selection - almost all the things that would have killed people before they could reproduce (which is the fundamental selector in natural selection) *no longer kill people*.

      The *only* way we can adapt, moving forward, or to deal with genetic defects, is through our own intervention.

      If we foreswear genetic treatments, we are dooming our species to eventual extinction, because over time, so many genetic defects will become so prevelent in the population we will no longer be able to survive (that will take a *very, very* long time, but if we forever ban genetic treatments, it would happen eventually). Well, maybe by that point, we will devolve to the point where natural selection becomes dominant again - e.g. a world where there is a lot of death, early, before the 'weak' can reproduce, selecting for what remains of the 'stronger' genes in the pool.

  81. Re:Just a thought... by JSBiff · · Score: 1

    How about rephrasing the question: "Would you like that *other* guy to read traffic lights so he doesn't crash into you?"

    Although, in most cases, a colorblind person can probably still read the traffic light positionally, e.g. red on top, yellow in the middle, green on the bottom. Might be a problem on a *really* dark night if you can see the lightbulb, but not the body of the traffic light - you know, when the light is 'disembodied' against the solid-black background.

  82. Improvement choice? by alexandre · · Score: 1

    Would you like to see infra red light?
    Would you like to hear super sonic sounds?

    Fuck yeah!

    1. Re:Improvement choice? by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      Would you like to see infra red light?
      Would you like to hear super sonic sounds?

      On the former, heck yeah! On the latter, OH HELL NO. Just having the normal hearing of a teenager was annoying enough before I got old enough to no longer hear high-pitched electronic whining noises. Way too many machines are designed to be comfortable to people with normal hearing and would be maddening to people with a better range.

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
  83. No more wrong by spyder-implee · · Score: 1

    Than curing Diabetes. Sure this bitch wouldn't be speaking up if that was the case.

    --
    Take what ye can. Give nothing back!
  84. This question bothers me... by multimediavt · · Score: 1

    Are we trying to 'normalize' humans to a threshold of experience?

    There are some poor word choices in that question.

    First of all, 'normalize' is not the objective. The human eye has taken many thousands of millennia to reach the current state of evolution. The human eye has developed over time to see a spectrum of frequencies of radiation that enable us to distinguish poisonous food from edible food, to know when someone's pulse rate is elevated, and a lot more useful observations that help to keep us alive. To 'correct' a genetic defect in a highly evolved sensory organ is not normalization.

    Second, what 'threshold' are we talking about? The most relevant definition of threshold is, 'the magnitude or intensity that must be exceeded for a certain reaction, phenomenon, result, or condition to occur or be manifested'. So, what magnitude or intensity is at work that would need to be exceeded to experience color vision, other than the frequency of light that is *not* being perceived by the aforementioned defective sensory organ?

    Don't get me wrong. I don't think the philosophical and ethical questions of restoring the evolved function to the sensory organs of an organism should be ignored. I think the question as stated is poorly conceived and is rendered invalid by the practical concerns of human survival, even in the modern societal context. There are some clear disadvantages that color blind humans have to overcome in order to function within nature AND society, even today. To me, it would seem that the person who asked the quoted question above is wrestling with the thought of "playing God", and thereby altering the path of evolution, but I don't think that's a rational argument in this case. Evolution has determined the 'normal' condition, not society. If the affected human chooses to restore the naturally evolved functionality of their defective organs, where is the moral or ethical dilemma, and/or where's the sin?

  85. I'll make a deal... by gorehog · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Either let me cure my colorblindness or EVERYONE has to stop using red/green LEDS for status lights.

  86. Re:Stupid by Rary · · Score: 1

    They didn't conceive the child naturally, they selected embryos to ensure deafness.

    No, their first child, who is deaf, was conceived naturally. They want to have a second child using IVF, but are upset that a bill going through Commons would require "deaf" embryos to be automatically discarded.

    Nevertheless, if a "deaf" embryo is chosen, and a deaf child is born, that child's only possibilities are to be born deaf, or to not be born. The parents would not have intentionally made the child deaf, they would have only intentionally not prevented the child from being born. This would be quite similar to a couple conceiving naturally, learning that the fetus was deaf, and choosing not to have an abortion. Would you want that child to sue the parents for "intentionally crippling" him/her?

    --

    "You cannot simultaneously prevent and prepare for war." -- Albert Einstein

  87. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  88. Morally Wrong? by jonnale · · Score: 1

    I am not sure why anyone would consider this morally wrong? Is there something about the operation that I am not aware of? How are they defining "morally wrong"?

  89. Re:Stupid by Rary · · Score: 1

    As far as I can tell, it boils down to the fact that if you 'cure' someone, it implies that they were deficient to begin with, and a lot of deaf people object to the idea that they are deficient.

    To me, that question comes down to individual choice. If Deaf Person A considers their deafness to not be a deficiency, then there's nothing to "cure", so let them be. If Deaf Person B considers their deafness to be a deficiency, then let them be "cured".

    --

    "You cannot simultaneously prevent and prepare for war." -- Albert Einstein

  90. Friend's Story by VanHalensing · · Score: 1

    Well, I'd say let the person decide. I had a friend who was offered a full ride to the Air Force Academy, and they were going to train him to be a fighter pilot, which is what he had always wanted to be.. All of this was contingent on a physical and psychological exam. He had both, he aced both... except for being colorblind. They ended up completely taking the offer away because of it. He would have said yes to this procedure, it was his dream. I'd say if the person doesn't want/need it, they shouldn't get it. If the do, then don't deny them. Maybe put an age limit on it, like Lasic and all of those procedures.

  91. Re:Stupid by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    Furthermore, any expectant mother who discovers her fetus has Downs Syndrome would be LEGALLY REQUIRED to have an abortion or risk being civilly liable later in life.

    One should think about this carefully before hoping the courts would side against the parents.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  92. Of course a non-colourblind person would ask this by Kryptonut · · Score: 3, Informative

    Those of us that ARE colourblind would LOVE to have it corrected. People don't realise how much of an impact it can have.

    I work in IT, not because it's what I dreamt of doing as a kid, but because I wasn't allowed to be a Pilot, a Captain (my father used to drive tugboats for a living) or even a Police officer.

    If you haven't experienced it first hand, then you have no right to question whether people who do experience it every single day of their lives, should be "allowed" to change it.

    I want the same employment opportunities as everyone else, and I want my nephew (son of my sister) to have the same employment opportunities as everyone else too, whether he's inherited the gene or not as well.

    /rant

  93. "Who? Me?" by westlake · · Score: 1

    There was so much that was grim, bloody and sordid about the creation of new and special weapons to kill people that I searched for comic relief.

    The anthropologists in O.S.S. were asked to come up with some tabu that was uniquely Japanese, something to which only that race was sensitive. I was told the answer was bowel elimination. A Japanes thought nothing of urinating in public, but he held defecation to be a very secret, shameful thing. A Japanese soldier, even in jungle fighting, even at great risk, would seek a private place to defecate. Here was my comic relief.


    I had a group of chemists work out a skatol compound, a liquid which duplicated the revolting odor of a very loose bowel movement. It left no doubt in anyone's mind as to what it was. We put this obnoxious chemical in collapsible tubes, and I named it, "Who? Me?" The tubes were flown over the hump to Chungking and distributed to children in Japanese-occupied cities Peiping, Shanghai, Canton, etc.


    When a Japanese officer, preferably of high rank, came waling down the crowded sidewalk, the little Chinese boys and girls would slip up behind him and squirt a shot of "Who? Me?" at his trouser seat. As a sort of extra dividend, our chemical was insoluble in soap and water, but very soluble in dry-cleaner's fluids, so, when sent for cleaning, the contaminated uniform endowed all the clothing in the batch with its offense.

    "Who? Me?" was no world-shaking new development,but it cost the Japanese a world of "face."

    Sometimes a joke can go too far.

    A small supply of "Who? Me?" tubes, which were our original test samples, began to disappear. I had the cabinet locked. The lock was picked, which was not at all surprising, since we instructed all of our saboteurs in the art of picking open all makes of locks and door latches. With the help of an assistant I booby-trapped the locker by having a tube of "Who? Me? 7 ' filled under such an aerosol pressure, that when the cabinet door was opened it would spray the thief, causing him to lose both his self-composure and his anonymity. That stopped all the monkey business but the culprit, so easily identified, was too highly placed to be scolded.

  94. WTF ? by daveime · · Score: 1

    How can helping someone be "morally wrong" ?

    I'm pretty sure if you took a survey of colour-blind people, there are very few who would choose to remain colour-blind.

    This isn't some aesthetic thing like having a nose job or botox injections for vanity / popularities sake. Neither is it a racial / cultural thing so that people can be "normalized" and assisted to escape from some perceived minority. It's about helping someone with an annoying affliction.

    What's next ? Are we going to start questioning the morality of helping people with short-sightedness or hearing impediments, just in case it further marginalizes those tiny minority who choose NOT to have corrective lenses or a hearing aid ?

    Fucking namby-pamby nonsense from do-gooders with too much time on their hands, if you ask me.

  95. Stupid people are breeding by captaindynamo · · Score: 1

    Why not, it would help battle the "Stupid people are breeding" problem. I live near many neighborhood/trailer parks where some people don't seem to do anything besides eat, breed, and live off the government. They don't seem to have any motivation to do much else. Some of the more intelligent people I know are not interested in having kids. If its a bad thing, it will go to hell really fast. Why not just see what happens.

  96. Oh my, this sounds like politics over common sense by Torodung · · Score: 1

    Someone's worried about a cure for "the gay," I think (or something similar, apologies to Rachel Maddow). That would be an ethical quandary for the listeners of NPR. You might even see avowed atheists come out and say such actions are against un-God's random mutative Will, until the Holy Retrovirus of Antioch turned them all into Mormons. ;^)

    Let's ditch the politics. The problem isn't the morality or ethical question of "curing" colorblindness, if that is a person's choice, any more than hair coloring is an ethics issue. It's that we would have to be very sure that the virus was constrained by the wishes of the curable. In other words: non-communicable. Otherwise, this sounds like the sort of health care mandate that would not be appreciated, or ethical. The preservation of that choice is paramount.

    The link appears to be dead, Jim, but I'm guessing that's the gist of it.

    --
    Toro

  97. Neurological disorders and Productivity by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    I have severe attention deficit disorder. Of the people I have met, my ADD is one of the worst. Compared to my father and grandfather, I have it worse simply because my mother went into premature labor which the physicians treated with alcohol. My ADD is so bad that there are certain things my brain simply CANNOT do. For example, when I was in High School, I could understand analytical geometry. It is not a "learning" disorder because I can learn just about anything. It is a cognitive disorder because it prevents me from cognitively DOING some things. I could explain it well enough that a struggling student could improve markedly. However, I couldn't DO the problems. It is something I struggle with every day. I can't tell you how frustrating it is to understand a problem perfectly and how to solve it, but be unable to solve it.

    Everyone in my family that has ADD is quite successful. Even my great-grandfather probably had it and he was a very important chemist in his day (Morris William Travers). My own experience is that the struggle against this disorder has forced me to excel far beyond what I would have otherwise.

    I am not alone. Sir Richard Branson credits his success on his dyslexia. I have always been a stubborn one..... Even if you asked me during the worst years of my school experience if I would trade in everything to be normal, I would have said no. But what of my parents who were really worried about me? Would they have done something against my will if it was available? I hope not but I am sincerely glad that was not an option.

    My son has ADD and is struggling in some ways that I didn't. My wife wishes horribly that he was normal. I am glad he is not: I am sure he will have a happy, fulfilling, and successful life despite the added challenges and will be stronger for it.

    I think that this sort of therapy does pose moral issues because it is too close to some of my own difficulties. Yet those difficulties have made me a better person. Moreover, those difficulties (including the fact that I was bullied repeatedly during my years in elementary and middle school) have provided me an opportunity to be cheerful through misfortune that I might otherwise have been overcome by. I have the courage to go my own way and the inward strength to be happy even when circumstances are fairly adverse. I sincerely hope that this sort of therapy for things like ADD is NEVER an option.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    1. Re:Neurological disorders and Productivity by thrawn_aj · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's very inspiring, but don't you see? - that's just the point. For every affliction recognized by the AMA, there is always SOMEONE who stared his affliction down and through sheer perseverance and determination, rose to heights he would never reached if he'd been born "normal".

      I applaud your courage and your attitude but what about the ones who didn't make it? For every success story like yours, how many fell by the wayside because they didn't have what it took to make it in this cruel world under the burden of their handicap? Or who simply had one too many problems to get out from under them? Shall we just tell them as they reach the end of their endurance and give up because it's just too painful that well, there was something that could have helped them by curing some or all of their problems but that society had deemed it immoral to take away the thing that made them special?

      How about the ones who simply didn't care to have their affliction be the defining feature of their lives and who have even greater aspirations for themselves? At the risk of offending you (I assure you that that is not my intention), I can't help but sense a bit of "well, I could do it - so can everyone else". Fair enough, but what if they don't have to? Would it be moral for me to wish an affliction on another human being simply because that may make him a better, stronger human being? There are challenges aplenty in this messed up world! Why would I wish for anyone to have more of them than absolutely necessary? It's not a videogame that one should wantonly jack up the difficulty level just for the added challenge.

      And more to the point, can't you extrapolate from ADD (as in your case) to EVERY SINGLE HEALTH PROBLEM EVERY SEEN and say that curing that problem was morally wrong because it disrespected the courage and inspirational fortitude that their lives might have displayed? What if I held out the example of Roosevelt as an inspiring example of how a man could have polio and still be one of the greatest presidents the free world has ever seen (which would be fine) but further went on to say that eradicating polio might have been the wrong thing to do because the disease might have brought out the best in some people. Clearly, the polio example is ridiculous ... right? What about AIDS or cancer? Or (more on topic) blindness? Is restoring sight to the blind equally immoral?

      At some point I can't help but feel that people are making a virtue out of necessity and holding on to it even when it becomes optional because it has now been converted into a virtue.

      Mind you, all of what I said only makes sense if the alleged cure is actually reasonably safe and WORKS. Given a choice between a completely uncertain cure and a reasonably certain but uncomfortable life, I would probably want to choose the latter. I can't imagine the kind of dilemma a parent would face if asked to choose between such bleak options but the choices are not always so stark.

      I can only say in conclusion that if mankind was "meant" to always play the hand that was dealt (if that even means anything), we would still be living in caves and cowering in the dark. Science (especially medical science) is humanity looking "Fate" in her disgusting, passionless eyes and telling her ever so politely to go F*** herself.

    2. Re:Neurological disorders and Productivity by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      For every success story like yours, how many fell by the wayside because they didn't have what it took to make it in this cruel world under the burden of their handicap? Or who simply had one too many problems to get out from under them? Shall we just tell them as they reach the end of their endurance and give up because it's just too painful that well, there was something that could have helped them by curing some or all of their problems but that society had deemed it immoral to take away the thing that made them special?

      Are you saying we should rob folks like me of a chance to excel because someone else might not? That's absurd. A much better approach would be to look at what approaches to parenting would maximize chances of success despite such disorders.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    3. Re:Neurological disorders and Productivity by thrawn_aj · · Score: 1

      Are you saying we should rob folks like me of a chance to excel because someone else might not? That's absurd. A much better approach would be to look at what approaches to parenting would maximize chances of success despite such disorders.

      How could you possibly interpret me as saying that? A person doesn't want the cure, fine - that's his/her choice. I was excruciatingly clear on that. What I objected to was your deciding that every single person so afflicted must make the choice you did. I think it's immoral for anyone to make either choice for someone else. I can't believe I'm repeating myself when I was quite verbose about this before.

      And are you saying that all such disorders MUST be preserved (irrespective of the person's choice) because it might inspire them to excel? At least my way, you get a choice and don't have someone else telling you how you ought to live your life. You seem to be saying (if I interpret you correctly) that such cures should be banned so that the afflicted don't have the choice to get rid of their problem. Instead they should be forced to shoulder their burden forever because you feel that's the way things should be; because that would be good for them. If people ever tried to force me to do something that because they think it's for my own good, I know I'd tell 'em to go soak their head.

      I'm saying that the choice should be theirs. How could any reasonable person disagree with that?

      Of course, if I were in that position, I would jump at a cure at once because I don't want a moral victory over life - I want a real one. To me it is absurd that such disorders are glorified as the cause of such excellence as yours when the real cause is the indomitable human spirit that people like you carry around in you and that is someone not everyone possesses (and that's the part I admire, NOT the disorder). If the latter kind of people do not wish to carry the burden, and a choice exists, who are we to insist that they should?

    4. Re:Neurological disorders and Productivity by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      How could you possibly interpret me as saying that? A person doesn't want the cure, fine - that's his/her choice. I was excruciatingly clear on that. What I objected to was your deciding that every single person so afflicted must make the choice you did. I think it's immoral for anyone to make either choice for someone else. I can't believe I'm repeating myself when I was quite verbose about this before.

      That's fine. I don't really have a problem with that. I would add one caveat though: I think that, with the exception of serious neurological disorders which render the individual inherently incapable of consent, I don't think parental consent should be enough. I think one should be able to wait until the child is able to decide for him/herself. That doesn't necessarily require waiting until the age of majority. However, the child should be able to discuss the risks and be required to enter consent as well.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    5. Re:Neurological disorders and Productivity by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      Clarification in case it isn't clear: I mean no therapy should be allowed unless the subject of the therapy (and not a substitute decision-maker) is able (where the nature of the disorder does not inherently prevent it) to articulate an understanding of risks and benefits and provide independent consent. What bothers me is the idea of changing kids' DNA just because parents are worried.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    6. Re:Neurological disorders and Productivity by thrawn_aj · · Score: 1

      Clarification in case it isn't clear: I mean no therapy should be allowed unless the subject of the therapy (and not a substitute decision-maker) is able (where the nature of the disorder does not inherently prevent it) to articulate an understanding of risks and benefits and provide independent consent. What bothers me is the idea of changing kids' DNA just because parents are worried.

      That sounds reasonable. While we may disagree on what the individual should do, we seem to agree that in the end, it is the individual's choice. In the case of children, I don't consider myself qualified to have an opinion since I don't have any, so your meticulously worded statement is quite acceptable to me (now if only it were up to you and me to make these decisions, the world would be a saner place :P). If you recall, I stated something similar in my original post - "I can't imagine the kind of dilemma a parent would face if asked to choose between such bleak options but the choices are not always so stark."

      Just as food for thought, there may come a time when gene therapy is so comprehensively explored that it will be no riskier than any minor outpatient procedure routinely decided upon by a minor's parents. We are hardly there yet (and probably won't be for many more decades so it may not even come about in out lifetime) but if and when it does, I do hope that humanity will have evolved past the point of deifying our DNA. I sometimes think that DNA has become the substitute for a soul when it comes to shenanigans about medical choices. More fact-based I guess, but just as annoyingly mystical. Oh well, that will undoubtedly be a conundrum that our descendants will wrestle with.

    7. Re:Neurological disorders and Productivity by Kavafy · · Score: 1

      Interesting discussion! Now, what if the supposed treatment could only be administered very early in life, or even before birth? How would you decide whether or not to administer it? What if it was a treatment for, say, cystic fibrosis?

  98. I disagree. by hallux.sinister · · Score: 1

    Folks, most of the posts on here seem to be jokes about upgrades to vision. I have a mild form of the red/green thing, and to me, there is no moral dilemma, to fix or not to fix. Rather than extrapolating the point of view that there are moral implications towards people augmenting nature, consider the opposite. If it is morally questionable to help someone see the entire "normal visible spectrum", then it should be considered just as morally iffy to fix someone who is nearsighted, farsighted, or has astigmatism, myopia, etc. If we can fix, by adding an appropriate lens, or by using a laser to adjust the shape of the lens, if we can, without having any trouble sleeping at night, then I think we CAN in fact do this, because it's not really any different from what is done when people are given canes to walk with, or hearing aids to hear better with.

  99. We live in that world today. by r00t · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What you seem to be describing is a form of meritocracy. The American dream you describe assumes that with hard work anyone can succeed.

    You're mixing up quite a bit here.

    Merit: it includes IQ, looks, strength, etc.

    American dream: everyone is ALLOWED to attempt success (unlike how some parts of the world work, with castes or nobility)

    Nothing says hard work will be enough.

    Anyone could be smart, anyone could be hard-working. The worst-case of the society I am describing is one without that possibility. It is utterly unmeritocratic: no matter how hard you work, you would be unable to succeed because you were genetically inferior.

    Genetic superiority is one kind of merit.

    You fail because you simply aren't smart enough, or haven't enough stamina, or lack the inbuilt emotional intelligence or what have you. The elite would be like an entrenched aristocracy, except instead of being merely more wealthy, they would also be physically and mentally privileged - and they would pass those advantages on to their offspring.

    This is how it works right now. Note however that there isn't a sharp line between elite and non-elite, and that the elite barely ever reproduce.

    Example: I chose a wife based on exactly those attributes, and she chose me in the same way. If you could add up all the attributes to make an eliteness score, you'd likely find that my score is nearly the same as my wife's score. There is an obvious reason for that: we all chase after the best we think we can catch. Now, unsurprisingly, my kids are turning out like my wife and I. It looks like I have passed my advantages on to my offspring.

    Historically the aristocracy were in fact physically different. The rich ate a diet including meat and a variety of other foods. The poor had only a limited diet of nutritionally incomplete foods - with insufficient protein, for example. Imagining eating a gruel of millet and turnips every day. The difference between rich and poor was manifested physically. You could tell a poor person just by looking at him: his status was physically marked on his body. In a physical conflict the rich would be likely to win simply because they were physically superior.

    Historically??? You can tell today. Obesity is very common among the poor people who live on corn syrup and trans fats. The rich folk subsist on organic produce and seafood. Lots of desirable things are associated with each other: having money, being educated, being tall, being non-obese, looking attractive, facial symmetry, not having STDs, etc.

    The difference is that today the poor are not excluded by law. They are unlikely to succeed, but they are allowed to try. We have social mobility, not a social lottery.

    1. Re:We live in that world today. by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      American dream: everyone is ALLOWED to attempt success

      ...and forced to suffer from all others' attempts to do so at his expense.

      What you need is a society where people aren't constantly pushed to compete with each other for things that are either useless or already abundant in nature.

      (unlike how some parts of the world work, with castes or nobility)

      18th century called, it wants its Conservative back.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    2. Re:We live in that world today. by gmuslera · · Score: 1

      Genetic inferiority, low iq, and bad look are no deterrent if you have castes or "nobility". Don't need to see to old europe for examples, in america someone with all those disadvantages managed to be the previous president.. In fact, he could had got the darwin award for an entire country.

    3. Re:We live in that world today. by srmalloy · · Score: 1

      We have social mobility, not a social lottery.

      Unfortunately, all too often, equality of opportunity is measured by equality of results.

  100. What arrogance! by roc97007 · · Score: 1

    I'm red/green colorblind. Don't I get a say in whether I get that corrected?

    Is this the culmination of the "differently abled" nonsense? I know -- let's ban glasses. It's morally wrong for people to be "forced" to be able to read street signs.

    Bah!

    --
    Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
  101. health care w/o affecting the gene pool by r00t · · Score: 1

    So if you've got a Darwin sticker on your car you shouldn't be in favor of any health care since "only the strong survive."

    Let's make a deal: we provide the health care as long as they don't reproduce.

    Colorblindness is 100 points of badness, minor hearing loss is 10 points, severe hearing loss is 50 points, total hearing loss is 300 points, diabetes is 50 points, each infection requiring antibiotics is 1 point...

    When you reach 1000 points, we sterilize you.

    1. Re:health care w/o affecting the gene pool by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Given that this very article is about our growing ability to fix any inherited defects, there seems to be very little value in preventing someone with these defects from breeding, if there ever was. Consequently, we can safely allow even you to breed, despite your apparently inadequate logical abilities.

      So there.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    2. Re:health care w/o affecting the gene pool by r00t · · Score: 1

      I take "any health care" to include non-genetic fixes for genetic (and other) troubles.

      Even the article isn't about germ line modification. We can inject into the eyes, not bothering with the gonads.

      The issue is having humanity become unable to survive a collapse of the medical infrastructure.

    3. Re:health care w/o affecting the gene pool by ultranova · · Score: 1

      The issue is having humanity become unable to survive a collapse of the medical infrastructure.

      Why is it that every monster always thinks his hideous deeds are justified by saying it's "for greater good"? And why is it that they always have such a flimsy grip on whatever branch of science, philosophy or theology they're abusing to justify their evil?

      If you want to improve humanity's gene pool, remove yourself from it. It's your kind of sick fuck who casually says "let's sterilize someone" who's going to be our doom, not a guy who dies of cancer at 40.

      For your information, humans only need to live around 16 to breed. It's a very rare person who needs life-or-death medical operations before that.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

  102. Major problem with your logic by George_Ou · · Score: 1

    Major problem with your logic is that any harm you can do to others they can do to you and very possibly worse. It follows the flawed conspiracy theory that corporations hire people to assassinate people. But if that were true, why aren't we seeing more deaths to important corporate people or politicians or their families? Assassins work for relatively cheap compared to Stanford graduates and it's very affordable to corporations but why aren't they doing it? Why aren't wealthy people paying off assassins much less on an institutionalized level?

    Couple reasons for this. Even mobsters who have murdered people eventually have families they care about and they eventually go legit (e.g., Las Vegas). They trade in their assassins for Public Relations, Marketing, Engineers, Lawyers, Lobbyists, etc even though all of these professions are more expensive than some meat head that knows how to off people. Now if mobsters default to this kind of behavior, what are the odds of someone who grew up shielded from violence, who has even more to lose in life playing this dangerous game?

    The outcome that you're suggesting would never be permitted on a societal level in a democracy. The disadvantaged will always outvote you.

  103. Re:Stupid by waynemcdougall · · Score: 1

    What about deaf? ... I hope those in the know will chime in here.

    You insensitive clod!

    --
    Recycle PCs and build a wireless community network www.hillsborough.org.nz
  104. Just wait... by feepness · · Score: 1

    ...till they find the gene to "cure" homosexuality. Hoo boy.

  105. Re:what 4 colors? by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    Point is, color perception is an artifact of the primate brain.

    Primate? Many non-primates also see "colors", some more and some less. But in general the spectrum is continuous. "Colors" are just an abstraction artifact of Earth-life and brains because processing the entire wavelength would require too many biological resources. Thus, animals only sample a few "corners" or "groups" of the spectrum that have proven useful for survival for their niche without being too expensive to maintain. We as humans labeled some of these groupings "colors".
       

  106. Simple Answer by hyades1 · · Score: 1

    There seem to be some advantages to colour blindness. Apparently people who are completely colour blind (almost exclusively men, and very rare) can pick forms out of distracting foreground/background patterns better than people with normal vision. They also seem to enjoy an advantage in night vision. Presumably people with red/green colour blindness (the common form) also enjoy some advantages over people with normal vision under some circumstances.

    Knowing these facts, it seems overwhelmingly obvious that curing the problem is the way to go...and the cure would very likely include the possibility of restoring the condition or creating it, should the need arise.

    --
    I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
  107. "Deaf culture" opposition to curing deafness by Animats · · Score: 1

    There's a political position that "curing deafness" can be immoral. It's even been called "cultural genocide". See this National Association for the Deaf position statement, Deaf Culture, Cochlear Implants, and Elective Disability: "Many within the medical profession continue to view deafness essentially as a disability and an abnormality and believe that deaf and hard of hearing individuals need to be "fixed" by cochlear implants. This pathological view must be challenged and corrected by greater exposure to and interaction with well-adjusted and successful deaf and hard of hearing individuals."

  108. Re:WTF? I am the patient. by Councilor+Hart · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I am colorblind and it is a serious handicap.

    Before the euro, my country had two bank notes of similar color. I couldn't tell one from the other by color. One of 10 times the value of the other. On a few occasions, I received more change than expected.

    I can't open an atlas and use it like you normally would. On every high school exam, the teacher had to help.

    I am also a physicist and I couldn't do the spectra analysis practicum during my first year of study. I am likewise limited in the amount of colors I can use to graph data. Some data are multicolored 2D contour plots. Either I have to ask someone what the values are or make educated guesses or apply other time consuming tricks.

    On the traffic lights, red is up, green is bottom. I hope they never change it/make it random or my life will be cut short.

    It limits my options in life. I can never be a chemist for example.

    I also feel I am missing out on some of the beauty in the world.

    And so on and so on.

    If someone loses a leg in an accident, do you deny him a wheel chair or prosthetic limb? Do you deny someone glasses as their eyesight deteriorates with old age? What about someone who is born deaf? Do you do deny that person the hearing aid implant?

    I am colorblind and I want a cure, damnit !!!!

  109. the real issue... by hitmark · · Score: 2, Insightful

    comes when this goes beyond fixing "issues", and starts improving on aspects of the human body.

    --
    comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
  110. Cochlear implants by QuzarDC · · Score: 1

    It seems as if they are trying to liken this to the opposition of some of the deaf community to cochlear implants. A much better example would simply be poor eyesight. It's not as though colorblind people are typically unable to function easily in a world designed for the full spectrum'd (?) to the point where they form a communal bond.

  111. Re:what 4 colors? by omfgnosis · · Score: 1

    Which three?

  112. Re:Stupid by jabuzz · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Indeed, that is fine. On the other side if a cure for deafness becomes available as a British tax payer who has to subsidize deaf children and adults through a range of help and other things given to them, I would consider it completely fair for these benefits to be removed should the cure be removed. So in this particular case should Molly's parents refuse the cure for themselves and Molly then they will have tens of thousands of pounds of annual assistance removed.

    Morally there is no reason whatsoever for me to pay to provide assistance for a condition that can be cured.

  113. Off with their nads. by fyoder · · Score: 1

    Making people more like the average, for example, curing colour blindness, is free, but enhancement costs you your balls. Making enhancement always cost and never allowing it to be got for free from parents' dna doesn't eliminate, but does reduce, some of the social implications. The rich still have an advantage, of course, but that's hardly new.

    --
    Loose lips lose spit.
  114. Ask the patient? WTF? by unwesen · · Score: 1

    That's a pretty simplistic attitude.

    "Would you like to not have red hair, like just about everyone else?"
    "Would you like to be shorter/taller than you are, like just about everyone else?"

    We build our surroundings inaccessible to people who are short or tall beyond the standard deviation. We discriminate - some of us, at least - against those who are "different". The moral dilemma is that we really should change that rather than change those who are "different". As long as we don't, there's an enormous amount of pressure on those "different", to the point where many of them might actually answer the above questions with "yes".

    "Would you like to have darker/lighter skin than you do, like just about everyone else [where you live]?"
    "Would you like to have straighter/curlier hair than you do, like just about everyone else [where you live]?"

    At that point we're dangerously close to racism. Which is just one form of discrimination; you can just as easily discriminate against the red-haired, the deaf, or the colour-blind.

    If that's what you catch yourself doing, change yourself, not them.

    1. Re:Ask the patient? WTF? by Thiez · · Score: 1

      > At that point we're dangerously close to racism.

      Dunno, sounds more like conformism than racism to me. Just wanting other people to be more like you (or wanting yourself to be more like other people) doesn't make you a racist.

  115. Re:Only if you're female by snowgirl · · Score: 1

    The genes wouldn't have to be on the X-chromosome, would they?

    And technically, you don't have to be female to be a tetrochromat. It's the TDF gene that determines sex, not the chromosome. And due to a variety of genetic, environmental, and endocrinological disorders, a person's sex doesn't always match their genes.

    One does however need two X-chromosomes for natural tetrachromaticity. Which is possible if someone ends up with an XXY genotype. These individuals typically come out male, yet are just as likely as females to have color-blindness and other sex-linked conditions.

    So, yeah, it's kind of possible that a male with congenital adrenal hyperplasia could end up with natural tetrachromaticity, but tetrachromaticity is quite rare as well.

    --
    WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
  116. Re:Who knows? + Preserving diversity by migloo · · Score: 1

    Dischromats are not handicapped, their color space has the same resolution as anyone else's but is layed out differently, giving them a well known advantage in camouflage detection for example.
    Correcting major genetic defects is ethically tempting but correcting a genetic non-defect would be absurd.
    Who can guarantee that this specific genetic peculiarity will not protect the species from some future lethal epidemy? I don't like geneticists playing god with a toy they do not understand at all.

  117. Re:Only if you're female by snowgirl · · Score: 1

    tetrachromat requires 4 color receptor coding genes...2 on each X-chromosome...the y-chromosome can only hold 1.

    So I hope you're a female slashdotter. Otherwise, a gender-change seems to be an extreme price to pay to get your vision patched to tetrachromatic.

    It's well known that a lot of the spontaneous genetic mutations occurs through duplication and later modification of that gene.

    So, it makes sense that we had the blue-green sensors (just like our Ape ancestors) with the green sensor on the X chromosome. Then spontaneously the gene is duplicated, spreads throughout the population... perhaps this unmutated copy is held also by a close-ish related species. But then somewhere along the line it mutates, and voila, the first human ancestor can see red. This is now a positive mutation, and spreads throughout the species.

    Done and done. :) Theory matches fact... more proof of Evolution.

    --
    WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
  118. some birds have an IR reflector by r00t · · Score: 1

    Normal (to humans I guess) light is seen in the normal vertibrae way.

    Infrared light needs a longer focal length, and the thing that matters is the nest below the bird. The solution is an infrared-reflective patch at the top of the eyeball, and an infrared-sensitive area at the bottom of the eyeball.

    (some kind of soaring bird I don't remember, like an Eagle or vulture)

  119. Re:Q: Could Colorblindness Cure Be Morally Wrong? by qbast · · Score: 1

    And you think this is impossible?
    Now: your kid is noisy. Dope him with Ritalin to make him shut up or he gets suspended from school.
    Tomorrow: you kind is colorblind. Fix him or don't even bother sending him to school.

  120. Re:Stupid by KiloByte · · Score: 1

    And that's bad how?

    --
    The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
  121. Easy by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    So you are gay, that can be fixed.

    So you are a redhead, that can be fixed.

    So you are black, that can be fixed.

    We had people who wanted to create a super-human race. No thanks.

    I am seriously near-sighted. It is who I am.

    Now take a look at yourself, are you a blond arian god? Then someone thinks you are not perfect enough.

    If you think there is no moral problem, then you have no problem with genetic screening and having your mate chosen for you on the best match and any offspring that doesn't meet standard, terminated.

    That is the moral question. It ain't hard.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  122. So... everyone got to be exactly the same? by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    Are you performing at the normal level? No, then you must be fixed.

    If you paid some attention to history, you would have seen the results of this desire to have everyone be "normal".

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:So... everyone got to be exactly the same? by Pitr · · Score: 1

      Hmmm... lets see... I didn't say everyone needs to be the same, and there's a big difference between considering "being different" a dissability, and considering "not being able to do something" as being a dissability.

      In regards to history, are you referring to the invention of the wheel chair and prosthetic limbs, or hearing aids, or maybe asthma inhalers, or perhaps insulin or pace makers. Wait a minute?!? Are those people just conformists! Wow they tricked me!!! I thought they just wanted to live!

      I think it's laughable that people are as against having their hearing fixed as I would be against having my hearing taken away.

      --

      --Not to be worried, Pitr fix.
  123. Question of fixing the Right Problem by Lemming+Mark · · Score: 1

    I can't see the article at the moment for some reason, maybe they didn't like the Slashdotting. But as various people have said, offering the choice to be cured / altered doesn't seem wrong. However, possibly there's a real underlying point that curing these conditions isn't wrong per se but perhaps curing them wouldn't be necessary if we could fix some of society's behaviours. If we didn't always assume that everyone had the same perceptual experience then we wouldn't need to normalise people in order to participate. The flip side of a cure being everyone's choice is the tendency to say "Well, you can get a cure if you want" and not bother to make things accessible to people. Which if they have a fear or moral objections about gene therapy (say) implies pressuring people to do things they're not happy with by excluding them if they don't do the necessary actions to conform.

    For the case of colour blindness it's not *that* debilitating for most people and it's probably too small and inconvenient an issue to pervasively "fix" in society any time soon simply because the condition isn't obvious to others and most people don't have it anyhow. Not having the cure isn't a serious problem and having the cure would also provide personal benefits beyond simply conforming, seeing more colours means you're getting more interesting inputs about the world. And various professions "discriminate" somewhat legitimately against colourblindness anyway so having the cure would at least give people options (examples include astronauts, pilots - you really want them to see the red warning light, though I'm skeptical about how much of a difference colour blindness really makes here if you still know where the lights are!). So I don't see that there's a great risk of unduly pressuring people to conform with this treatment.

    There's a wider issue, though, which could become significant with other treatments for other conditions and so it's worth thinking about even if it's not the problem here.

  124. Not nearly far enough by smchris · · Score: 1

    Where's my ability to distinguish red from infrared and violet from ultraviolet?

  125. I am colorblind, and... by Hitto · · Score: 1

    If they could just change the red/green LEDs to red/something-that-isn't-even-close-to-being-mistaken-for-the-same-fucking-color-by-us-daltonians LEDs, I wouldn't need a cure. You know, red/blue would work. That is the ONLY thing I resent in everyday life. Assholes. Instead they wanna prick my eye with a needle, fuck that. I don't care about being a pilot, or a chemist.

  126. I wouldn't recomend that... by denzacar · · Score: 1

    There are some possibly unintended consequences to seeing in IR and UV.

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
  127. I can show you "Normal." by Seawitch · · Score: 1

    It is a cycle setting on a washing machine. The term "Normal" as applied to humans is medical bullshit!

  128. No, it is not morally wrong by EmagGeek · · Score: 1

    What is morally wrong is telling someone with a disease or defect that they are not allowed to pursue curing themselves. People should have sole dominion over their own bodies, and if someone who is colorblind wants to see colors, it is not within the rights of The State to tell them they can't.

  129. Unintended consequences? by moxley · · Score: 1

    Mixing viruses and genes in order to "cure" something seems like the sort of situation that is bound to end up with unintended consequences.

    Viruses are masters at what they do: adapt and proliferate.

    Maybe I have read too many books or watched too many movies, but I wonder what the possibilities are for this to mutate, or spread, or just go horribly wrong.

  130. Harrison Bergeron by Insightfill · · Score: 1

    We could just go the other way and make everyone else color-blind, like in Harrison Bergeron.

  131. Provocative? I think not by NEDHead · · Score: 1

    There are provocative questions; there are stupid question; and there are questions designed to draw attention to the asker. Is this the largest number of comments to any /. posting?

  132. I want to be a tetrochromat by davidwr · · Score: 1

    Where do I sign up to be like Susan Hogan.

    Too bad my TVs and computers and even my books and newspapers are only tri-chromatic :(.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  133. Cures for deafness by davidwr · · Score: 1

    Even if a cost-effective treatment is found for most forms of deafness, there will be people who won't be able to take advantage of it and will need to be accommodated.

    *Those who suffer certain sound-robbing injuries or illnesses may not be able to take advantage of treatments like cochlear implants or genetic manipulation

    *Those who were deaf during their formative years will have a long, hard effort in front of them to learn to process sound and aural language. For some, their brains may not be able to adapt, for others, the effort required may simply be too much. At a minimum, it will be as difficult as learning a new spoken language, something that is very hard for most adults.

    *There are many organizations out there who provide finances and other assets to help the deaf, particularly deaf children, to hear as much as technologically feasible.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  134. A possible cure for color-blindness for you by davidwr · · Score: 1

    A camera with an implant to the brain could someday give you 3-color vision. Think of it as a cochlear implant, but for the eyes. Due to the inherent risks of any surgery though, I doubt any American doctor would do such an implant merely to correct something as minor as color blindness.

    Another thing that could be done in the very near future is to use augmented-reality glasses that highlight things which are distinguishable to most people but not to you and mark them so you can tell them apart. These same glasses, or more likely, the same technology in a digital camera, can be used by product designers to make sure their products don't cause problems to people with common forms of color-blindness.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  135. similarity to cochlear implants by lumbricus · · Score: 2, Informative

    This situation seems to be similar to the ongoing debates about the morality of cochlear implants (for the hearing impaired): http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cochlear_implant#Controversy

  136. It's a very good question by Coppit · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A few thoughts...

    First, I'm colorblind. I'd say it impacts me maybe 1% of my life. Graphs at work must use primary colors. Earlier in life I had the damnedest time with resistor markings. Even now when I crimp CAT5 cable I have someone double-check the colors. For a lot of colorblind people, they can detect the colors, it's just really hard and they have to stare and concentrate. Of course total colorblindness (no color at all) is a different, more rarer condition.

    What I wanted to point out though is that earlier in the thread someone got chastised for asking what people would think about a "cure" for gayness if it turned out to be due to a genetic difference. The reason that's a good question is that, unlike colorblindness, it brings into the picture concepts of self-identity and culture. AFAIK no one identifies strongly as being colorblind, or considers themselves part of the "colorblind community".

    We ran into this exact problem with my son, who has the Connexin 26 mutation, making him profoundly deaf. We were faced with a choice regarding the "cure" of cochlear implants. The deaf community is strongly against them, in large part because they see the coming demise of sign language and their culture (IMHO). They would go so far as to use disingenuous arguments like "let the child decide when they are 18"--way after the period of language acquisition. In the end we decided that being deaf wasn't "normal" despite what the deaf community said. Was that elitism or practicality? Being deaf has a much bigger impact on one's life than being colorblind.

  137. Carpentry skills of infants Re:Who knows? by davidwr · · Score: 1

    After a few generations of letting infants play with power tools, who knows what carpentry skills would evolve.

    The ability to work effectively with a few fingers or limbs missing comes to mind...

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  138. If color-blindness is a disability... by davidwr · · Score: 1

    So is being much shorter or taller than average, being left-handed in a right-handed culture, having uncorrectable or corrected vision less than about 20-40, having a lot less physical stamina than average, uncorrectable noticeable hearing loss, having an IQ below about 80 or 90, having a lot less common sense than average, having the infirmities normally associated with old age, easy-to-accommodate food or medicine allergies, etc. etc. The list goes on and on.

    My point is there are many disabilities that are minor in impact. Most of us will have at least one during our lifetime well before old age, and those who don't will likely have an immediate family member who does.

    Yes, society should make reasonable accommodations, such as designing tools that left-handed people can use and where practical using color schemes that don't impact the color-blind. However, it's not a major handicap like near-total blindness, having only enough physical stamina to walk short distances without a rest, or food allergies so severe or complex it's hard to eat without hurting yourself.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  139. -1.5? by sconeu · · Score: 1

    Cue the old Yorkshireman...

    Seriously... I was -7.5 OD and -6.5 OS, before my PRK, not to mention the severe astigmatism. Pre-surgery, I would have killed to be -1.5.

    --
    General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    1. Re:-1.5? by mad_minstrel · · Score: 1

      How did the surgery work out? I'm precluded from surgery right now due to iris inflammation a while back. But I was considering it before. The doctor said it may become possible again in a couple of years. I never went through with it though because I was concerned about long-term side-effects.

      --
      May the source be with you.
    2. Re:-1.5? by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      It would be morally wrong for him to answer that and risk influencing your decision to change your reality.

    3. Re:-1.5? by wtbname · · Score: 1

      I am not an eye doctor.

      I did have the lasik procedure done and the results are spectacular. There are other options now as well, some sort of insert a contact lens object in the eye thingy and improvements in lasik / prk procedures.

      Do your research. Pick a reputable clinic. Force your self to read the horror stories, they are out there. Make sure you meet your doctor right before the procedure. Make him tell him your name and show him your chart and the settings they are going to punch into the machine. Verify they are your readings from your pre-screenings. There are documented incidents where they just put the wrong settings into the laser doohickey machine and carved a persons eyes into the opposite direction.

      The most important thing to set your expectations is to understand that your vision is going to change. Mostly for the better. Slightly for the odd.

      With lasik, there are documented effects like halo'ing, light sensitivity, eye dryness, and more. PRK has a slightly different set of side effects, some you may notice or not.

      Even taking into account the flaws, it was the best money I ever spent in my life. Recommended highly.

    4. Re:-1.5? by sconeu · · Score: 1

      Really nice. I had PRK, not LASIK (my corneas are too thin, for that, apparently).

      I can now drive without glasses. Only downside? I now occasionally need reading glasses for small print.
      However, I can use $15 off-the-shelf readers, a big change from $400 prescription lenses.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
  140. Conspiracy!! by hammeraxe · · Score: 1

    I'm colourblind (at least that's what they say). I think, though, that everyone else sees the world wrong: it's a massive consipracy against me.

    The only trouble I've had with this is that I had to cheat in the vision test when getting my drivers license. It went surprisingly well :P

  141. Pirate and the red shirt and brown pants by davidwr · · Score: 1

    Enjoy: First mate, bring me my red shirt!

    If your brown pants are a shade of green, are you a Vulcan pirate or a Romulan one?

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  142. Political correctness? by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Why every time somebody does or says something monumentally stupid there is always somebody ready to invoke the cheap spectre of political correctness???

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  143. Re:Stupid by davidwr · · Score: 1

    And [legally requiring a mother of a Downs-syndrome fetus to abort is] bad how?

    Because if certain religions are correct in their understanding that God exists, God defines good and evil, and God defines abortion as evil, then it's bad.

    Of course, if God exists (and I personally think/believe/know He does), he's seen fit to make his existence neither provable nor disprovable using science or other purely rational means of investigation. Therefore, from a purely rational point of view, your question is a valid one. I provide only a religious/philosophical, not a scientific/rational, response.

    From a practical matter, though, if we claim to value freedom of religion, then requiring expectant mothers to abort against their religious beliefs is bad. If on the other hand we do not value religious freedom....

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  144. Nope, they aren't. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Simple statistics and common sense should suffice to kill such stupid idea quicky.

    If they were advantages they would have propagated amongst most people.

    They haven't

    End of discussion.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:Nope, they aren't. by TaleSpinner · · Score: 1

      I wonder if you realize how foolish you sound.

      Every trait has a tradeoff. Evolution has no master plan, it has no absolutes, the superiority of one trait over another depends on environment and luck. It is not an accident that sickle-cell is a prevalent trait amongst those of recent african descent. Environmentally, living in africa presents a greater likelihood of dying from malaria. The sickle-cell trait protects the individual from malaria. In that population, it's a survival trait, as I said, in spite of that fact that getting copies of it from both parents is fatal. It is statistics, my friend.

      Outside of Africa, particulary north European types, malaria is not a big issue. Sickle-cell in THAT population is NOT a survival trait, and is slowly disappearing amongst people of african descent who live in the north. They are also getting whiter, since black skin protects from heavy sun in africa but entirely blocks the diminished wavelengths needed to produce vitamin D in the skin, thereby causing rickets, a particular scourge of black people, especially nursing black mothers, and one reason why many countries add vitamin D to milk. Blackness is not a useful survival trait in northern climes.

      Human evolution is a fascinating subject. You would do well to study it before demonstrating such cocky stupidity in public again.

  145. Re:Stupid by davidwr · · Score: 1

    Should she avoid giving birth to children simply because they're likely to suffer from depression?

    I'm sure she had plenty of opportunity to consider this question before deciding to have a family. She made her decision to get pregnant (assuming she wasn't raped), and she has no new information at hand that may make her reassess her situation. Now, if you said that the amniocentesis came back positive for a test that indicated an extremely high probability of depression, much higher than the probability she had in mind when trying to conceive, then this would be a valid question for her and the baby's father to consider. But you didn't say that.

    Another factor is that the state of medicine is changing rapidly, and debilitating depression or depression-related suicide attempts are rare before adolescence. This is a much different question than if the fetus tested positive for a birth defect that would lead to almost certain death in the first year or two or a longer life as a mental infant or a life filled with severe chronic pain without any real hope of recovery.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  146. Problem with choice model Re:Stupid by davidwr · · Score: 1

    The choice model works well for consenting adults. It gets sticky when it comes to "fixing" your children.

    If my baby has a gene that makes him have terrible, uncorrectable body odor and I choose not to fix it, then I enroll him in public school kindergarten, do the teachers and other students (and their parents) have any say-so about it? What if the body odor is so bad that it affects the learning environment for the other kids, what then?

    What if I'm an anti-gay bigot (maybe my dad ran off with a man, leaving my mom to raise us kids, or maybe I'm a bisexual who is half-self-hating) and they discover a gay gene and I "fix" it in my kid or use genetic screening to make sure I don't have a "gay kid?" Is that immoral?

    What if I'm a rabidly heterophobic lesbian and I use genetic screening to make sure that my egg and my sperm-donor sperm will produce a gay or lesbian child? Is that immoral?

    Substitute tall, short, light skin, dark skin, blue eyes, brown eyes, egghead, average intelligence, musically gifted, athletically gifted, etc. for gay/not-gay if and when genes that control these traits are discovered.

    THAT is the thrust of the moral argument.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  147. Eliminate small print! by argent · · Score: 1

    People wouldn't need eyeglasses if documents didn't have small print! They should mandate a minimum 72 point type in all books and displays instead!

  148. We've always been cyborgs by FoolishOwl · · Score: 1

    I read an argument that humans have always extended their biological capabilities with technology, that this may even be true of proto-humans -- a human with a stick is a cyborg.

    (I wish I could find where I read the argument originally.)

    Given the possibility of enhancing our abilities with technology, people will do it.

    The problem I can see with the original scenario is the worry that normalizing people's biology may have unanticipated consequences -- that color-blindness might have some advantage, that may not be obvious. Think of the sickle cell trait, which helps resist malaria.

  149. Idiotic by b4upoo · · Score: 1

    Could a cure for deafness be immoral? How about congenital blindness? How about epilepsy?
                        Some people have too much time and money if they sit about worrying about nonsense like the morality of curing color blindness. And why in the world should society get to decide if something is moral or not. Why not let the person who is about to have a color blind child or a color blind person deal with their own issues?

    1. Re: Idiotic by josepha48 · · Score: 1

      What if they discover there is a gay gene? Would 'curing' gay people still be ok? What if there is a gene that makes people 'republican' ( it has been discussed as a stubbornness gene ), would that be ok, or one that makes some a liberal? I get the argument with colour-blindness, my brother is colour blind. I think the question should be do these people want a cure? I'm sure some blind people do, but there may be some that are ok being blind. I think the question is do these people want to change not weather we should be able to change them or not.

      --

      Only 'flamers' flame!
      Does slashdot hate my posts?

  150. Drop-jawwed... WHAT? by drmitch · · Score: 1

    What a stupid argument. "Is it wrong to help someone that was born with a defect that inhibits their abilities in the real world?" I suppose giving prothetic legs to amputees is morally wrong too.

  151. My point is not about sight per se by Geof · · Score: 1

    Say I accept that we can reach agreement about a definition of normal sight. That does not change the argument I am making, which is that once we start using this technique we will almost immediately come up against a different question of normal for which the answer is not obvious, and it would be very easy to cross that line without realizing it until after the fact. There is a slippery slope here. Which is not to say we shouldn't do it at all. But we need to carefully weigh the consequences and determine where we wish to stop before we begin, because if we do it after it may be too late to slow the momentum for improvement and prevent the fracturing of society into physically distinct classes.

  152. Morality still voodoo science by jwbales · · Score: 1

    The fact that anyone would even ask whether or not it would be moral to cure color blindness is a symptom of the fact that morality is still considered to be outside the realm of reason, that there is no way to get from an 'is' to an 'ought'.

    Ayn Rand pretty much blew that notion out of the water when she identified the purpose and nature of morality in her essay "The Objectivist Ethics" in her book "The Virtue of Selfishness."

  153. Re:Stupid by k8to · · Score: 1

    They didn't cripple her. They selected her for her characteristics.

    There's a big difference, although this sort of selection is also problematic in some ways.

    --
    -josh
  154. cure everyone! by twotailakitsune · · Score: 1

    Some women can see even better then Normal. We see in Red, Blue, Green, but they have a 4th. How about curing me of not being able to see the 4th?

  155. We see different colours by tengwar · · Score: 2, Interesting

    There's a huge assumption in the phrase "colour blindness". Most languages call it Daltonism, after the discoverer, which makes sense because most of us can see colours, just not quite the same ones you do. For most of us blue and yellow are seen the same as an ISO standard human. Green is more interesting. I see several colours which I've had to learn to group together as "green", since they don't have much in common to me. Yellow-green is obvious, but I also see blue-green (not turquoise - different colour) and red-green. Those infernal bi-coloured LEDs show red-green. Blue-green is the colour of a "go" traffic light green in my country (UK) and in most countries I've visited. Twenty years ago I would still see the odd old red-green traffic "go" light, but they seem to have been replaced as a matter of policy. The difference between a blue-green "go" and a red "stop" is huge for me: no chance of confusion. An amber (I think it's called yellow in the USA) traffic light is much closer to red, and I have to use the position to distinguish them.
    Size of the colour patch also matters: I can distinguish finer gradations in colour if the patch is larger. Luminance differences also help. This is part of the reason why specific mains wiring colours in the UK (and I think the EU) were chosen: for most colour-blind people, there is no risk of confusion.
    Would I get it changed? Possibly, but it would be a risk trade-off like laser eye surgery for my myopia, with a much more restricted up-side. It would be useful for getting the right white balance for my photography, but not as much of an advantage for that as you might expect.
    Much more important, lower risk, and easier is to make sure that you use the right colours for user interfaces - road signs, software etc. - or provide some sort of word-around. Let me give an example: I have to prepare a weekly Powerpoint 2003 slide summarising the state of my projects. There are two places where I have to colour something red/amber/green. One is a cell in a table, and the other is a filled circle. Unfortunately there are different dialogs for editing these colours: one contains two rectangles - the first containing recently used colours, and the second a wider palette. The other dialog contains a hexagonal palette. It doesn't matter hugely exactly which amber or green I use, but I'd like it consistent across the slide. This two-dialog arrangement means that I can't use the position of a colour in a palette to get a consistent selection.
    Since come what may, you will always be dealing with people with uncorrected vision even if an upgrade is available, it's worth taking a few minutes to get this right when you are doing design work. It doesn't need to compromise the experience of anyone with standard sight, any more than a blue-green traffic light bothers them.

  156. Community & sibling inheritence by Valdrax · · Score: 1

    A lot of human genetics is actually based around some people being designated more as caretakers for their relatives and other community members than sources of future offspring themselves. Take menopause, for example. Menopause extends the life of women by stopping them from risking their health with childbirth. This preserves women to live on as reservoirs of community knowledge and experience to teach to children. (If you'd like to read more about that, I recommend Jared Diamond's book "The Third Chimpanzee.")

    Homosexuality (in men, at least) is most frequently found in later born sons. Past a certain point, extra sons are not really needed to pass on the genes of both parents and could fulfill similar societal roles as old people in assisting in the care-taking of the first-born's children. I think I remember reading somewhere that a study in Samoa showed that gay men were likely to dote over their nieces and nephews. Here's an article on that.

    In tight-knit communities (i.e. the kind of hunter-gather tribes that dominated thousands of years of human evolution), having additional hunters & gatherers to provide for your grandkids in the forms of sons and daughter that provide for your firstborn's children may be of greater advantage than just another source of mouths to feed. In many hunter-gatherer societies, infanticide was used as a means of "birth control" to keep the task of feeding ones children manageable. This became less frequent with the dawn of agriculture, but having additional relatives around to provide the children of others is a survival strategy for yourself and for your first-born (and best provided for) children because it means that you have less need to limit the children you do have. (You can think of homosexuality as a "parasitic" trait for latter born children to aid the earlier born ones.)

    Additionally, cultural norms in many pre-modern societies either forced homosexuals to adopt heterosexual lifestyles or allowed for homosexuals to engage in sex with their own gender for pleasure while being required to perform their "spousal duties" with a wife. (Think of ancient Greek pederasty for example.) Bisexual practices allow for homosexual preferences to survive and even flourish, as in bonobos who use lesbian sex for social bonding.

    Another study has suggested that homosexual men tend to have more fertile female siblings and more homosexual relatives on their mothers' side meaning that homosexual genes could be passed down through unaffected maternal lines. This jives well with the theory of homosexuality as a tool for putting more of your eggs in the best basket and designating other children to a support role.

    Lastly, as the order of birth examples above hint, homosexuality is only partially genetic. Environmental pressures both before and after birth can influence sexual orientation. Genes that increase sensitivity to these pressures can exist in heterosexuals and be passed on with no ill effect on survivability (or increased effect on survivability by assuring extra care for children with a homosexual uncle).

    All of the above factors provide a rationale for homosexuality as a positively adaptive trait and one that has a clear mechanism for being passed on.

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  157. I take it you didn't read the link. by Valdrax · · Score: 1

    If you read the article, it's pretty thought-provoking. The UK government allows for couples to select for hearing children via IVF (i.e. they can choose to throw out an embryo for being destined to be deaf), but deaf couples do not have the right to select for deaf children. The deaf couple in question is livid because this essentially is a eugenics program where the UK government says that it's okay for parents to decide that a child should never be born because it might be deaf -- but refuses to allow deaf people to do the same with children they don't want. The end goal is to allow deafness to be utterly eliminated from society. To those who can hear, it might seem like the laudible elimination of a tragic disability. To those who grew up deaf, it's nothing less than a declaration that their lives are intrinsically less valuable than ours -- that they are less worthy of legal protection as humans.

    But if after growing up deaf, you became upset at your parents for "denying" you hearing, what would be the grounds for the case? Your parents didn't splice deaf genes into you before birth. They simply allowed you to be born and didn't allow someone else who could hear to be born. Basically, you would be suing them for not killing you and not allowing someone else to be born in your place.

    How could a court let a case like that go forward?

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  158. This is how it's bad. by Valdrax · · Score: 1

    A few reasons it's bad:

    1) It violates the "no duty to act" principle in civil torts by attaching a duty to the parents to somehow correct such an embryos defects before allowing it to be born (which is currently technologically infeasible) or else face liability for circumstances beyond their control (i.e. which genes that particular human embryo inherited during fertilization).

    2) It places state control over a parent's right to choose to keep a child which is as or more offensive to many than the notion of state control of a parent's right to abort a child.

    3) It establishes a eugenic precedent that could be extended to other traits that become unpopular which may have beneficial side-effects. (Think schizophrenia and artistic creativity.) Downs is pretty universally awful, but what about autism?

    4) It creates horrible issues of standing, particularly in the form of legally cognizable harm and redressability. (I'm talking from the perspective of the American concept of standing, so I don't know if this applies in the UK.) You are suing because your parents didn't choose to kill you before birth. If they had done so, you would be dead, which most if not all civil and criminal courts consider to be a worse fate than mental impairment. How much money does it take to make up for the fact that you were born?

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    1. Re:This is how it's bad. by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      How much money does it take to make up for the fact that you were born?

      To show standing you have to show that you were harmed. Here the harm is being born. The duty that the GP thinks the parents have is to kill you. Therefore you can sue because you aren't dead.

      But let's extend this a bit further. Now suppose I get hit by a car and suffer a brain injury which leaves me disabled for the rest of my life. By the same token I could sue the doctors and those responsible for substitute decision making for not letting me die without a do not resuscitate order or the like. "Oh wait," I hear people shout: "it's legally different to abort a fetus and to disconnect life support!" True, but it seems to me the standing issues would be the same.

      But there's more. If they let you die, then your family could sue, right?

      If a lawsuit like this ever gets to trial remind me to drop everything, go to law school, and become a litigator.....

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  159. Not so simple. Is it a disease? by Valdrax · · Score: 1

    No, of course it is not immoral to cure a disease.

    Is color-blindness a disease which should be cured whenever possible or a valuable human trait that gives enhanced abilities in certain situations (such as in low-light or against certain camouflaged targets)? If you don't assume that it's a disease, then is it acceptable to eliminate a trait from humanity simply because our society designs itself around the visual abilities of the majority?

    And then where do you draw the line on what is a disease and should be eliminated at every turn and what is simply an acceptable different between people? Color-blindness seems to cause far more disadvantages than advantages, but what about certain mental / personality traits, like mild Aspergers or transsexualism? Who gets to decide what is a disease and what is a variation, and which way does society default when it's vague? Do you let parents get to decide what kind of abilities and personality their children will have, and will it be worth it if a child decides not to purse the career their parent engineered them for?

    (Personally, I'm in favor of allowing a cure for colorblindness -- even before birth -- but I'm not so arrogant to decide that it's a crazy thing to even think about objecting to or that people are reactionary lunatics for being upset by it.)

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  160. Seems like kind of a grey area by KingTank · · Score: 1

    ...or is that more of a cadet blue?

  161. Re:Stupid by Rary · · Score: 1

    Not only that, but even if you don't take the religious perspective, forced abortion would be taking away a woman's right to choose what to do with her body. Therefore, forcing an abortion would be bad if you're "pro-choice", and also bad if you're "pro-life". Basically, no one wins.

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  162. Its not a provokative question by Snaller · · Score: 1

    Moira Gunn is just an idiot.

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  163. If you had asked me by Snaller · · Score: 1

    If I wanted to be normal I would probably have said yes.
    So far nothing has shown me that would have been a wrong choice.

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  164. Give me the full palette! by andrewwarrenau · · Score: 1

    Screw the self-serving pontificating. I'm colourblind and would give a great deal not to be. Part of my body is incapable of performing basic operations that others do with ease - if that's not a disability I don't know what is. If there's a fix, and it's affordable, I'm grabbing it with both hands! I respect the views of other colourblind people who feel differently about their condition, but it's pretty offensive to be told by people with perfect colour vision that I should be happy with my lot, or that people shouldn't "judge", or whatever PC crap happens to be the flavour of the day.

  165. Forget namby-pamby moralizing over colorblindness by bobvious · · Score: 1

    I'm bald in red, green, blue, monochrome, or acoustic emissions (for any bats reading this). And the blind would figure it out if I let them. The question is will this approach cure baldness? If colorblindness is a by-product, that's fine with me.

  166. Re:WTF? I am the patient. by Lunzo · · Score: 1

    The traffic lights thing is poor design. I heard that in Australia the green light has some blue mixed in so it looks different to the red one for red/green colourblind. I don't know if there's any truth to that statement because I'm not colourblind myself, but it is what I heard.

  167. another question to answer by DRACO- · · Score: 1

    If you really want to ask, is putting plastic covers over outlets for safety of our children morally wrong? Is all the safety training and safety equipment morally wrong? Without the advances of safety we would have millions of people dying and darwinism would actually be working in the human race. Humanity would actually be able to evolve to our next level except because of our intelectual abilities, we have staved off our next level of evolution.

    Change the question, is curing cancer morally wrong? Curing color blindness wont change much. Those who are color blind know not to go into bomb diffusion jobs or other color coded problem jobs. Evolutionary wise those who are color blind are not getting themseleves killed or dying out of the human gene pool and instead are passing on the 'damaged' gene set.

    Question now is, do we now chose our evolutionary paths now?

    Yes.

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  168. Re:WTF? I am the patient. by (C)0N0(R) · · Score: 1

    Be careful driving if you find yourself driving in the village of Tipperary Hill, Syracuse NY.

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