Genetically Engineering Babies a Moral Obligation, Says Ethicist
Hugh Pickens writes "The Telegraph reports that Oxford Professor Julian Savulescu, an expert in practical ethics, says that creating so-called designer babies could be considered a 'moral obligation' as it makes them grow up into 'ethically better children' and that we should actively give parents the choice to screen out personality flaws in their children such as potential alcoholism, psychopathy and disposition to violence as it means they will then be less likely to harm themselves and others. 'Surely trying to ensure that your children have the best, or a good enough, opportunity for a great life is responsible parenting?' writes Savulescu, editor-in-chief of the Journal of Medical Ethics. 'So where genetic selection aims to bring out a trait that clearly benefits an individual and society, we should allow parents the choice. To do otherwise is to consign those who come after us to the ball and chain of our squeamishness and irrationality.' Savulescu says that we already routinely screen embryos and fetuses for conditions such as cystic fibrosis and Down's syndrome and couples can test embryos for inherited bowel and breast cancer genes. 'Whether we like it or not, the future of humanity is in our hands now. Rather than fearing genetics, we should embrace it. We can do better than chance.'"
A better statement might be that by applying genetic selection we might be able to do better than we have in the past. It is not a certainty at all. Pitfalls don't advertise and the world has a way of fooling us at times.
Do you really want to play with your child's DNA ? I mean, what if you fuck it all up?
without alcohol's input?
But where do diseases end, where does aesthetics start? Who enforces that line for the rich? Clearly this guy hasn't seen enough dystopian movies about two-class societies emerging from genetics.
NB: The message above might reflect my opinion right now, but not necessarily tomorrow or next year.
Certain people are evil. There is an ethical obligation to stop these people from causing harm. To do this we should breed super warriors of middling intelligence. After all, someone will have to die, and it is better if the fewest people possible die.
Ethics is very easy.
So in the future I should have super docile, conformist babies that fit the cookie cutter notion of how a baby should look? No thanks, I'll just stick with chance.
I'm not even going to bother with the obligatory "what could possibly go wrong", because this is so bat-shit crazy and irresponsible. We simply do not understand how personalities work and how traits interact - to even suggest that we start removing traits before we understand how whole works is just as stupid as suggesting we amputate everyone's left hand to make sure everyone is right handed and not 'sinister'.
didn't the Nazis try this a few years back ??
I think we've seen this movie before.
Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
I think Gattaca already covered this topic.
Awesome. Let's scan for the genetic combinations that make up people like Julian Savulescu and remove those for all future generations.
The world will be a better one without those people who want engineer the Uber-Human. Let's try education (of the individual as well as society) instead. The other slope is way too slippery. On the other hand, who can say no to a future full of perfect, every-young supermodels (addicted to coke and alcohol, you'll not get that out of humans)...
If someone could make a baby that wouldn't cry and would sleep all night, then I'll buy one.
My wife worked for a pediatrician in a well to do area a couple of years ago and if it looked like their kid was going to be under 6 foot, they would ask for a referral to an endocrinologist for hormones to get the kid to grow a bit more. The pediatrician didn't think it was necessary in most cases, but they are his patients so he complied. The parents wanted the best for their kids and wanted to insure that they could get any advantage that they could possibly get for them.
James Watson, co-discover of DNA, was on the National Press Club a few years ago, and this question was asked (can't find the archive right now - heard on NPR). Anyway to paraphrase,
90% of CEOs are over 6 foot. A 5 foot 2 inch tall man and a five foot tall woman may want to better the opportunities for their child.
Of course, what he meant was that up to a point, height matters in all sorts of endeavors and not only sports: politics, finding a mate, work, etc ... There is a strong correlation between height and success. Yes, I know - queue up all the exceptions but keep in mind, many of those were extraordinary people; such as Einstein - 5' 5".
Its always the same thing withe busybodies and totalitarians: Anything that is not forbidden is mandatory.
Here's an alternate ethic: Leave us alone. We'll make our own choices.
So, how long will it take for society to organise itself so that dumb worker drones have the best opportunity for a great life?
I think that we should start with a round of upgrading human capacity for long term insights so future generations will have a better grasp of the consequences of our actions.
We have five different genetic conditions in our family, some are considered diseases, others are considered disabilities. I am quite sure under these new "ethics", myself and my whole family would be on the top of the list for instant abortion. Yet despite all medical conditions, many of my family have lived very long and productive lives. In same cases, I consider my relatives and ancestors choice and will to fight and overcome the odds stacked against them something to inspire me to never feel sorry for myself. Would we ever see such a thing in a future where all babies were born "perfect"? I think the sense of entitlement we see in our society is already overwhelming as it is, and i find it's people who overcome their disabilites that throw cold water, figuratively speaking, in the fact of self indulgence and entitlement. Would we see that this 'ethical" future?
My other point, this whole issue reminds of of that famous line from near the end of the movie "The Third Man", where the character Harry Lime says:
"In Italy for thirty years under the Borgias they had warfare, terror, murder, bloodshed—but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, and the Renaissance. In Switzerland they had brotherly love, 500 years of democracy and peace, and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock."
In a world full of "perfect babies", well, just saying.
He's STILL talking eugenics.
Even taking out the racial connotations and stating you're looking at it from a more "humane" angle is STILL going to raise hackles.
Also, genetics has been getting studied for under a century. While YES, we know a LOT about the human genome, there's still a lot we don't know. Such as WHY some of these diseases and behaviors are in our genetic code in the first place. Yet people want to start selecting away from it, or better still, excising it from our genetic code?
They're essentially playing with fire, and the nearest bucket of water is someplace in the vicinity of Alpha Centauri.
Chas - The one, the only.
THANK GOD!!!
The question is only when we start to be open about it and try to influence the genetic composition of our kids more directly,
You know it's time for the next revolution when your rulers' names end with roman numerals.
Then we can legally mandate, better babies or no babies.
If we can get there, then we just make sure what babies are better and what babies rule US.
DAMN! This may have happened over two hundred years ago with a selective breeding project for the leading political families of US.
IMO: It would explain Bush, but not Reagan, maybe Reagan worked for our Gang of Four (King of Hearts Chaney, Dummy Don Rumsfield, Pontious Pilot Bush, and Coffee Candy Rice) and Animals Control Officer Rove.
China will do it to US we must be christian jingoist, and competitive. We are #1, so we can piss on all.
Unaccountable leaders are masters, and unrepresented people are slaves. How do US and EU fare?
He makes the mistake to believe that we know what will be the best.
For the overall health of the popolation, the choosing of what Genes are liveworthy, will have an negativ effect.
We can see this with Sickle-cell disease. We see it mostly as a desease, but if you are living in a malaria infested area, you will live longer with sickle-cell desease. So we have no clue what positive side effects a gene can have. If we reduce the genetic differences in our population, we will be much less able to survice new threats.
Think about it: If you genetically engineer a baby, you've inserted non-natural genes, that is, inventions you can patent. So after the babies grow up, those people cannot have children without paying you for licensing (at the time the general public notices it, many years later, it's already too late). Maybe they'll even insert terminator genes, so that you cannot any more have offspring the normal way, unless you buy a (very expensive) special "medicine" which re-activates the genes needed for production (but only as long as you take it).
The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
IMDB Linkie
Ring any bells?
Look, no SIG!
O brave new world
that has such people in't.
Same, same...new take.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugenics
How do we know that a gene "responsible for violence" does not also confer the ability to perform surgery or take other extreme actions that are beneficial?
This sounds like an incredibly great idea, that I'm sure will have no down sides.
I mean, if we weed out violence, that can only be a good thing. Nice docile people who won't put up any kind of fight. What could go wrong with that?
Also, aren't mental illness and creativity linked?
https://www.google.com/search?q=creativity+mental+illness
So if you weed out schizophrenia, for example, to create a superior being.. you could simply be creating non-creative people, who will never invent anything new.
Honestly, we don't understand the human mind and how it works... how can we choose what human attributes are safe to discard?
The title suggests genetic engineering, but the article in fact talks about selection: you don't build a child to be sure he won't become an alcoholist, you discard him if the tests say that he could grow into an alcoholist.
How that would be realized? En masse switching to in vitro fecundation? Widening of the reasons for which you can have a therapeutic abortion?
Let evolution handle the details like weeding out bad genes. With the exception of weeding out genes that make someone unable to survive to adulthood. When we start taking a proactive roll in minor stuff like personality then we start down a road to eliminate genetic diversity not based on one actually being better or not but being based on our perception. Evolution might be slower but it's less likely to give advantages based on Fair Skin, Blond Hair and Blue Eyes, and if it did it doesn't do it so it so quickly that if that "advantage" goes away it's not stuck at some dead end after only 1 generation.
It would be cruel to genetically engineer humans that were compelled to be ethical, as they'd have little chance of happiness or even survival in our morally diseased world. People suck, it's always been this way. Sure, there are a few good examples of moral supermen... Lincoln comes to mind... but Lincolns are exceedingly rare.
Just like I believe that we will get cybernetically enhanced I also think genetic modifications will happen. In the beginning probably just modifications of somatic cells like in gene therapy. For example, they have already demonstrated that green-red color blindness in male macaques can be cured by gene therapy. Bevause of this it is likely that the same technique could be used on adult humans to get the UV vision of birds. When this is common the next logical step is germline modifications... I think this future is far more likely than yhe molecular marker assisted selection of complex traits suggested in this article. Especially brcause you might loose a lot good with the bad if you start selecting on complex traits.
And what if by "curing" their alcoholism via genetic engineering you turn them into a raging psychopath? This is eugenics, plain and simple, and anyone who thinks it's a good idea really needs to be genetically modified to raise their IQ above 10.
I'll trust in God instead.
Unintended. Consequences.
They have found a genetic link between the two in many of the most successful people of our age.
We really don't know enough yet to risk this.
This program does make sense due to the global desire for mediocrity and safety.
Why is it always the people who contribute nothing to science or understanding who urge radical incaution.
Can we stop pretending that "a guy said something" is news? Who cares if some shmuck has an opinion? It might as well be me saying the same thing, or the opposite, for all it matters.
Does anyone take anything from the telegraph seriously?
Screening out harmful genes is not genetic engineering. Genetic engineering is splicing, or mutating genes. What he is talking about is just a selection process.
Does anyone really think it's a bad idea to screen out the gene for Huntingtons? There's absolutely no reason any child today has to be born with Huntingtons, an incredibly miserable way to die as a chile. I'd say that screening for Huntingtons is such a serious moral obligation, that failing to do so should be criminal.
If that's OK, it's just a discussion of how much selection we should be doing, not whether we do it. Actual genetic engineering is a whole different story.
Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
"I wish that all of mankind would give up it's warlike ways and the Earth would become a society of pacifists. That way, I could take it over with a butter knife."
-Dogbert.
-Styopa
Great idea! We can build the new "Socialist Man"!
Let's start by weeding out any genes that promote jewishness, or , or perhaps atheism.
And wait how about skin and hair color, we can finally get rid of .
ANd we can breed in a deathly fear of guns.
God knows we are so smart that we can forsee every good and bad combination, because it is all so linear
This proposal has horrible intrinsic moral problems. And think about the societal consequences.
Parents with a good moral sense would not engineer their babies.
However, selfish and immoral parents would do it. Thus they could create a strong, intelligent, long-lived baby, who they would raise in an environment of selfishness and immorality.
Rinse and repeat. After a few generations, you have divided society in two classes: one upper, dominating class consisting of strong, intelligent, but selfish and immoral beings (who would no longer be even _humans_), and one lower class consisting of naturals.
This is a freaking dystopia.
The scary part is that this gentleman is editor-in-chief of the Journal of Medical Ethics! I fear for the future.
If selection for stupidity was made in the past, certainly this Oxford Professor Julian Savulescu guy wasn't born...
It is even worse that that. We would be selecting for selfishness. See
http://science.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3056849&cid=41035551
This would be an unprecedented dystopia.
That would be very short sighted with the current level of knowledge. Even when we know something about the function of some gene variant, we typically don't understand well the interaction with other genes and their variants.
With some exceptions, many known disease causing gene variants only make the risk of getting disease higher, but there is no guarantee that you will ever get the disease. Other genes (with their variants) and environmental factors play large role in all except the simplest disease genes.
And it is worth to remember that often a gene variant that has some negative effects, has also some positive effects as well. Otherwise evolution would probably have removed that variant long time ago.
I think that dog breeding that has caused very unhealthy breeds and plant monocultures like banana, which is causing extinction of variants that lack diversity to resist diseases, have shown examples of what may be ahead of human race if get carried away with short sighted breeding ideas.
We're already heading towards 1984, now it seems like we're heading towards Gattaca , great!
Right, because humans do such a spectacularly better job than natural selection. Most breeds are now a seizure -fest, in addition to all the other problems. Oh but wait, that's only because of "bad " breeders. If you just put the design future and control over every birth into the hands of a few select "experts ", everything will be fine. Whatever, Hitler.
Sometimes a "demonized" thing is really evil.
Oh, and "war which was waged to bring the US economy out of recession"? Take off the tinfoil hat, please.
And since when does war help the economy? Have you ever learned about the broken window fallacy? War is bad for the economy.
Psychopathy and other behavior "problems" (binge eating also comes to mind) may have been survival traits during our hunter-gatherer times; these behaviors only become problems in the context of a civilized life. If civilization only goes back to 10k years to our 200k year history--which apparently included a number of ice ages--and given how fragile our civilization is today, I'm not ready to agree we have a moral obligation to start modifying and engineering behavior. Quite the contrary, I personally believe we have an obligation to let things run their course even if it's cruel to individuals 99 out of 100 times. Note that on a practical level and as a parent, my feelings and beliefs are just the opposite!
A genetically engineered Ernest Hemingway would have been a girl named "Ernestine": http://www.mentalfloss.com/blogs/archives/21087
and likely would have had no motivation to spend his life proving his maleness.
This guy is perfectly in line with the most stupid aruments in support of eugenics:
1. He takes one simple genetic disorder (Down syndrome) and uses it to extrapolate to all posible "disorders" that potentially have a genetic component. This is such a basic logical fallacy that he should be stripped from his professor of phylosophy title.
2. He assumes, contrary to established facts, that genetic mutations are either "good" or "bad". In fact the phenotype of genetic variations strongly depends on the environment and mutations that are manifested as bad in one context may be good in another. For example mutations that give you sickle cell anemia will also protect you from malaria.
3. His approach will eliminate genetic diversity within the population that applies it. Elimination of genetic diversity is one of the best ways to kill off a population.
Every topic about any subject with potential for abuse is about the rich (though not solely so, of course.) The rich are the people in power. Those with power decide how any technology will be used. Everything is a double-edged sword, and the question "How will those who hold the largest double-edged swords use them?" is always entirely valid. Indeed, it must be asked.
I hope this helps you understand why "we turn any slashdot topic into an anti-rich diatribe", which is - of course - a complete mischaracterization of the nature of the discussion.
Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
We wouldn't want all the parents in a town creating engineers out of their kids, so it should realistically come down to the town itself to determine what it needs in the future and to plan the babies accordingly. Everything could be laid out. You have 5 engineers coming up, 3 politicians, 15 labourers, 2 policeman, 1 firewoman and so on... You could plan the schools for these up and coming citizens and everything would be laid out nicely for their entire lives. Of course, you have to expand beyond the town... The country needs soldiers, so you have to make some of those somewhere too.
Imagine the efficiency. An entire society planned like a game of Simcity where there is nothing big happening by chance. A civilization born into bondage.
Exaggeration or the next logical step?
1. Unfortunately, I suspect there's a positive correlation between many "negative" personality traits and beneficial outcomes. Many creative types suffer mental illness. Aggression can lead to competitiveness which can lead to achievement. Higher rate of autism among gifted kids. Etc.
2. So far as I can tell he's not actually proposing "engineering" or "designing" babies; he proposes terminating in utero all the ones that don't meet his criteria. Some folks see a difference between the the one and the other.
"Oxford Professor Julian Savulescu, an expert in practical ethics" who made him an expert really...
What makes anyone think we can actually identify all the interrelated effects of any gene - especially ones that affect the brain?
PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
The position of CEO selects FOR psychopathy. "Bad" traits like lack of empathy, lying and cheating are really just those traits that benefit the individual over society. "Good" traits are the traits that benefit the group. This guy isn't doing it for the individual children. He wants to be protected from your individual children. He's doing it for him.
Validating the morality of future actions based on the morality of current ones does not always lead to good choices. And therefore, shouldn't be used as a valid argument for a particular corse of action.
Per example:
I've already killed 5/6 witnesses to my jay-walking, so I should probably kill the sixth.
We already prohibit gays from marriage in this state. Shouldn't we also prevent them from living together?
Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
Choosing a spouse is very different from genetically engineering a baby. One of the differences is that genetic engineering is far faster and more radical, not leaving time for society to adjust. It could create a race of intelligent and strong (but not necessarily moral) beings in a few generations. See http://science.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3056849&cid=41035551
We cannot allow the genetic modification of people to screen out "undesirable" traits, because guess who will ultimately get to decide what are undesirable traits? Why, the government, of course.
"We should always ask how genetic engineering should go wrong." It's like calling someone out for going on an anti-gun nut diatribe after a bunch of nuts up and kill a heap of people. Who else is in a position to potentially abuse new technology? Minorities? Non-wealthy individuals? When we start to have people blaming the rich for peeing in dank city alleys, then you can start on that.
Me. Human rights (including the right to life) are unalienable.
This is actually a good reason to let the rich go ahead and mess with this. Let them go about tinkering with their genetic code, removing bits here and there that they think will make them perfect. Then, after a few generations, the house of cards will start to collapse. All the bits that they have removed will add up to some major defects. But it will be too late. They will have screwed themselves. Just as ruling classes of the past have caused their own demise through inbreeding, these selfish bastards will genetically modify themselves into oblivion. Bwahahahaha!!!!
And then your kid is at a disadvantage.
Besides, morals are relative.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
Oh yes! Genetically engineer people who want to serve me, uhhh, I mean society.
C'mon, Weena, Morlock needs another "house cleaning"...
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
The main problem with that is, who gets to decide which genetic modifications are "good" and which ones are "bad", and will they try to enforce that on others? There are people that would love to make it so that things like cannabis have no effect, for example, or that people have no inclination towards religious belief (which, like it or not, is a personal choice).
FC Closer
Moral relativism is absurd. If all morality is relative, then moral relativism is itself relative and therefore non-binding.
Also, moral relativists are huge hypocrites. They claim moral relativism when we are discussing something that they like (such as prostitution), but when we discuss something they do not like (such as deforestation, or nuclear energy), then they are all for absolute morality.
I am congenitally missing several teeth, and have had to undergo significant treatment(braces and surgeries) because of it. I have always had excellent oral hygiene habits, but people have often assumed the opposite because of the missing teeth.
Genetic engineering might mean as little as stimulating cells so that a recessive trait(like the "perfect" teeth common in one of my parents' families) becomes dominant.
Although I don't intend to have children, occasionally I have considered the possibility. I know that people are often fearful of the results of genetic engineering and believe that it would be done for bad reasons, but is it so wrong to not want to inflict what I have gone through on someone else?
The good professor starts with screening flaws, but finishes with the admonition to, "..bring out a trait that clearly benefits an individual and society." Notice the subtle difference? Moreover, he starts by conflating ethics with morality ('moral obligation'), but finishes by accusing those who may disagree as being squeamish and irrational. In my first ethics lecture at university, the professor made it clear that ethics and morality are separate beasts. The same applies to ethics and legality (and morality and legality, for that matter). I for one do not appreciate such atrocious bait and switch, especially from someone who should (and does) know better.
It will happen and it will be considered moral to some group of people somewhere. It can not be stopped.
Look at food. You bash GM food and related tampering and people take a whole different position as if you are some anti-science flat earth religious nutcase. It shouldn't take much money from some megacorp to get government and the public on their side as they've done with the huge amount of GM stuff out there today. We knew a lot less in the science when we started putting those frankenfoods out to pasture-- and today relative to the problem space we still know nothing!! Even religious people are for sale with today's advanced marketing and numerous corrupt religious "leaders".
Humans are not evolving. We've evolved long ago to the point where we alter (more like hinder) our own evolutionary process so anything we do to cause it to change would be bringing back evolution to the human species. Yes, it would be more conscious than the reality based chaos of natural selection and that is bound to have stupid decisions --because humans are involved. Where is the evolutionary pressure on humans today?? We protect, cure, save just about any creature to come out the womb... to the point where impossible abominations can't even be aborted to save the mother's life without a ton of BS. Sickly children with amazingly bad conditions are kept alive to procreate at HUGE expenses and Darwin Award contenders are saved from the brink of death... See the 1st 10 minutes of the film "Idiocracy."
The way to approach this is to allow any genetic tampering parents want; this would stop widespread policy BS from making HUGE mistakes and instead create somewhat more random and diverse changes where the impact would be less damaging. The reality is, without global government this is the way it will be with each nation making different kinds of blunders -- likely bigger than just leaving it wide open. Even if illegal, there will be people working around it because parents can be quite crazy about their ego extensions (offspring.) Somewhere it'll be legal or easy to circumvent. Peer pressure is about all one can do.
Eugenics is not as bad as people make it up to be; since Hitler embraced it the whole thing is instant taboo even to intellectuals; doesn't help that we had arcane unscientific views during its heyday either. I grew up with a kid who was normal but had MANY problems resulting from BAD parenting which could have been avoided but we as a society now refuse to deal with the issue of mentally retarded people having children. BOTH his parents were quite retarded and his mom went from one retarded husband to another --- literally, which also doesn't help the children. His siblings were genetically retarded as well; worse than the parents, either genetically or worse due to improper care. It was bad for all the children to have retarded parents; they should have been given to competent parents but if you want to avoid hurting the feelings of the parents (who may be retarded but they do have fully functioning emotions) it would be better all around to simply not allow them to have children in the first place. My friend needed parents above a 3rd grade IQ.
Should we be spending crazy amounts of money to keep some people alive so they can have children?? If you think we should all spend any amount of money and effort to prolong everybody to the last possible miserable moment then at least can you consider if we should allow these people to have children? Is it really THAT big of a deal to have children? There are always plenty needing adoption besides the fact we are like 7x over max population. Many issues will be used to legitimize GM humans as ETHICAL, gradually it'll expand from the accepted excuses. Your mutant kid running off a machine can have offspring thanks to Monsanto's personalize superman where you insert only the (unimportant) DNA from yourself and pay a low initial fee! Your grandchild and future generations pay patent rights for any children they may have for eternity (because p
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How can the parent post be described as "flamebait"?
Moderators are suppose to follow the Slashdot moderation guidelines!
Don't mod something as "flamebait" simply because you disagree. Instead, reply and post your own idea!
creating so-called designer babies could be considered a 'moral obligation' as it makes them grow up into 'ethically better children'
Ethics is a matter of opinion and are not universal. Diversity is key to survival. Don't go the way of the Borg.
screen out personality flaws in their children such as potential alcoholism, psychopathy and disposition to violence as it means they will then be less likely to harm themselves and others.
Bummer about accidentally weeding out creativity and genius in the process. That professor has a lot to learn from the factory farming industry that made all sorts of mistakes with breeding in pigs, cattle and poultry, accidentally creating inferior genetic lines and losing important behavioral traits. We don't know enough to start messing with 'designer' babies.
This falls in the really, really, really bad idea category as in, the late humanity that bred itself to extinction.
In the world of science fiction this scenario has played itself out many times. The most popular of these was the whole 'Wrath of Khan' plot line in Star Trek. What we have here is a few scientists' arrogance that they could somehow build a better human - turning into Frankenstein-monsters because 'the superior humans' always thought themselves so and sought to dominate and control us lesser beings -- for our own good. For the greater good was often the excuse used by Hitler and other despots throughout time. Again, in fiction - refer to the Grindlewald sub-plot in the Harry Potter series.
Now to complete the circle, that is what progressivism (let's be accurate here - communism under a pretty label) and liberalism has done to the world today. It seeks to limit variables for the masses, and in turn is killing our economy and our society and forcing us all into a lower quality of life. When all are forced to be the same, there is no individuality, no creativity. When natural selection is limited, We lose the strength of our genome as we supposedly limit the weaknesses. If there were no blindness, there would be no Ray Kurtzweils who had to invent text to speech readers. There may never have been the musical genius of Stevie Wonder, Ray Charles, and so on.
Despite the so-called good intentions of these scientists and mis-guided people desperate to control the outcomes of the human existence, NATURAL SELECTION is and remains the best hope of humanity. When we start playing with that, we risk everything.
Should we just let those who are somehow inferior just wither and die - of course not. Charity and compassion have always been one of humankind's best traits. We need to help each other, but not permanently stack the cards and try to fundamentally change the rules of the game. Let us strive to produce cheap and highly available sources of energy. Let us teach our global brothers and sisters how to sustain themselves and avoid unneeded injury and illness. Let our problems be the inspiration of new triumphs of human achievement. Since I started with the lessons of fiction (which by the way is an excellent human invention to teach us morality lessons without having to experience it first) let's continue down that path: With great power comes great responsibility. (There are many variations of this theme - but for the sake of brevity let us assume you can recall these on your own.) Let us not so arrogantly play with variables we can scarcely understand, let alone control. Let us not try to play 'god' - I fear the real God will not look kindly upon us if we do.
The ethical and scientific thing to do is screen some and not others. We don't know what will happen. Saying one option might doom us all is ridiculous when you have no clue.
With immortality around the corner it's not going to matter very long anyway. What's the ethical thing to do when you are designing your own body?
No one is speaking of denying someone treatment for alcoholism. We are speaking of engineering designer humans, which not only violates human dignity but also would create a dystopia with vastly different social classes (much worse than it is now). See http://science.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3056849&cid=41035551
Human dignity is more important than money.
Can I sue the makers of BabyGen if my kid fails algebra?
'Surely trying to ensure that you have the best, or good enough, children for a great life is responsible parenting?' Fixed that for you...
Genetic engineering is different from what you describe, for multiple reasons. One reason is that what you describe is not transmitted to the child's offspring, so it is less likely to result in a separated and immensely powerful upper class. See http://science.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3056849&cid=41035551
Has this ethicist seen it?
They are called Republicans...
"The first time I got drunk, I got married. The second time I bought a chimpanzee, after that I stayed sober" Arian Seid
Hardly anything's that simple in genetics. We already know that the genes for red hair also tend to produce freckles, and it turns out it apparently affects pain response in the skin, too. Everything's interrelated.
The proposal is to select for genes affecting personality, though. How complicated can we expect gene effects to be in the brain? Nasty mazes of interrelated and overlapping effects. A gene that might produce alcoholism in some people might produce a great artist or adventurer or scientist when combined with different genes. We just are not informed enough yet to be making such calls.
PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
I, for one, DO NOT welcome our new, genetically engineered overlords.
But there's a nice difference between serious flaws like major diseases and personality flaws like alcoholism. There's virtually zero chance of overcoming a major disease, but there's a huge chance of overcoming a personality flaw. While the former creates a never-ending drain on others, the latter typically does not. What's more, the latter results in quite a significant perspective shift, which we often call inspiration.
I'm also intrigued by something more. The "best-suited" person in this day and age would never volunteer for military service, not be likely to protest anything, never understand the plight of those suffering with personality flaws, not waste their life to create amazing art. . .
Ok, so I've just described myself. I look forward to more of me!
The interview is very short, but it's a real pisser to pass.
I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
A "moral obligation" to kill off embryos and fetuses until we get the one we think is perfect? If that is true, then apparently this guy's parents didn't feel the same way. Sounds a bit like we are going for the "perfect race". Hitler would be proud! When you start playing God, don't get upset when He comes and shows you who really is God.
Maybe if we did it we could avoid have idiotic "experts" talking bullshit in the first place.
Free expression is great, but that guy is a living example of how everything got to have limits.
We've already domesticated ourselves to a degree where the worldwide level of violence is at a historical low (Better Angels of Our Nature). This is just speeding up the process. The people who haven't learned to live in modern society get locked up in prisons and produce fewer children than they would otherwise (presumably). So of course we should try to do this. There will be fewer genetic dead ends (prison) and drags on society (welfare/crime).
One step away from eugenics. My cat's a better ethicist than this guy.
As much as people here would like to compare genetics to computer software, there's only so far that analogy goes.
Your genes will not force or prevent you from having a particular personality trait. They don't "make" you rebellious or creative or intelligent. Many purely physical characteristics are highly dependent on your environment. In addition you are dependent on non-genetic as well as genetic inherited biology. DNA alone does not include all the information necessary to make a person.
There are many people here with sophisticated understanding of technology, but not so many who understand biology. Biology has been moving faster than any other field over the last 10 years. Things you learned 5 years ago are now understood to be wrong. Try not to have a knee-jerk reaction based on science fiction fears.
Let's start with simple things like food. What would happen if people could drink saltier water without dehydrating, or synthesize more vitamins internally, or digest cellulose? Would that be terrible?
"We always know best, and what is for the best."
"Our intellect is capable of producing a better world on its own, if given sufficient technology."
"It is immoral not to condition our babies to accept whole-hardheartedly, their statistically inevitable circumstance in life."
Thank Ford, Huxley's vision of a moral paradise is nigh.
"Flyin' in just a sweet place,
Never been known to fail..."
I probably have slight ADD. One of the reasons could be that my mother ate lots of licorice when she was pregnant with me and there are studies that hint to a link between slight ADD - something that would today be called a disease, in other times a talent - to being a sweet tooth and pregnant women eating the stuff.
Slight or partial symptoms of ADD are called by some a genetic disposition that has solid advantages in certain societies but solid disadvantages in others, like ours today. A hunter in a gatherers world basically, to some theories go. Some experts say that ADD is an invented disease.
I curse my concentration problems that definitely are due to my brain chemistry and certain childhood conditions and maybe a few habitual other things. However, the emotional independance and the high frustration tolerance that comes with it are a gift. Its a very special talent that makes it very difficult to blend in and, for instance, find a regular job (a problem I'm having right now), on the other hand it does give you the agressiveness required to turn down a shitty job even if you're broke and your options are running out. It's, if you will, a bit of a moderated-risk-taker condition. I wouldn't be like that if I didn't have these problems, the social situations that occur due to them and the coping mechanisims I've developed to handle them. All that together give me an edge, I just have to use it correctly and avoid situations where I don't function.
It's the basic mental condition emperors or simular people (think 'the Steve Jobs Type') have. They either are bums, drunk and stoned loosers sitting on the curb, or in a small room toying around with some big dream or they are at the helm of a big empire or - nowadays - a large corporation.
If everyone were like me or even more so, the world would go to hell. But without people like me, it would aswell. People who compensate their desire for poetry and meaning due so either using poetry (Duh!) or some other form of art, philosophy or the turn to alcohol and drugs as a substitute. ... I wouldn't want the world filled with boring unimaginative bland characters. I'd rather have the one or other struggle with their demons and have society develop methods of helping each other out.
Bottom line: I think it's to early for humans to decide what kind of personality actually is benefitial to society or not. We're simply not intelligent enough to do that yet. Maybe in a thousand years, if there isn't a giant setback. ... But it's just a few decades ago that a few societies started to accept that women do have a soul and are 100% just as worthy humans as men - it's to early to judge unborn by their genetic disposition and not run the risk of doing serious long term harm to humanity.
My 2 cents.
We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
1. How does one become an "expert in practical ethics"? 2. Who determines which personality and physical traits are desirable and which are not, and what is the policy for dispute resolution? Hitler would just love this guy.
This is a terrible idea. We are God's children and therefore perfect. Even with our imperfections.
What he suggests was the dream of the nazis. to create the perfect humans, by selecting race.
To manipulate the life of a man even in the womb of his mother is an abomination.
Where did he study ethics? on Mickey Mouse comics?!?
I specifically said that "This proposal has horrible intrinsic moral problems." Creating a designer human, as if he/she was a consumer product, violates human dignity.
I think Savulescu is full of sh*t if he thinks anybody has an obligation to tinker with the genetic makeup of their babies. And society certainly doesn't think so: parents don't even have much of a responsibility for dealing with the consequences of their parenting mistake, the taxpayer usually does that.
On the other hand, I think you certainly have a right to tinker with the genetic of your baby. If you want blond-haired, blue-skinned babies with strong collectivist drives, knock yourself out.
hire an ethicist.
Fugue for Aaron Swartz
Fixing genetic diseases is a good thing, designer babies is a bad thing. Look at the situation in China, everyone was supposed to have only one baby so a large portion of the population used sex selection to choose to have a male child. Now there are millions more men than women and if you aren't at the top of the social ladder you can't find a mate.
Self modifying code is the best code. Get crackin' boys. Our software should have fewer bugs and be more "ethical" by the next major release. New! Genetically modified babies. Now 83% more ethical as determined by the National Council on Ethics (chaired by the former CEO of Monsanto).
For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
Professor Savulescu is a professional ethicist.
Always leave your moral judgements to the professionals.
Today it is far easier to achieve "assortative mating" due to advanced economies and enhanced information technology.
Intelligent men and women find each other in college or on the Internet, and have smart children. 100 years ago, intelligent people would be far more willing to marry less intelligent people due to population limitations - based on who lived in their town, or perhaps would trade off looks or brawn for intelligence.
Let's be honest, this is happening, and leading to higher levels of IQ inequality in advanced economies.
Should we be "playing God"? Who knows. Who decides what is a defect? Who knows. Those are arguments for better people than I. What I _DO_ know is, I'm sick to death of seeing families fill minivans with daughters while waiting for a son to pop out. Americans want a son to carry on the name, call Junior, play ball with Dad, whatever. I don't care. Just let them have one.
Have you ever known one of those families that have six daughters and one son? The son is _ALWAYS_ the youngest child. And the daughters know full well what happened when they get older. How would you like to go through life knowing that you were a failed coin flip? The emotional issues that these girls develop is horrible. Their parents are idiots, but they are idiots that know what they want. Let them choose the gender. Please.
It's the basic mental condition emperors or simular people (think 'the Steve Jobs Type') have.
And possibly Bill Gates.
You might have what is called Asperger's Syndrome.
Have gnu, will travel.
Watch as mainstream sources urge people to program their children to be "good citizens", while the people who run the mainstream sources engineer their children for "leadership abilities".
This has some ... interesting military applications.
Also, a cure for homosexuality.
Super babies will be genetically engineered to support a totalitarian system and if you're not engineered you're nobody and second class. To ensure that this happens, they will be dumbed down and engineered for their respective future workplace. Viva Oceania!
It's generally not that case that from the emergence of any new possibility that you could do something, it automatically follows that you should do it.
The reasoning is akin to Cantor diagonalization. Any imperative that you should do something has to be justified, and such justification proceeds stepwise.
Parity: What to do when the weekend comes.
What they are talking about here is exactly that: something akin to engineering - basically using science facts and "recipes" to create or modify things without really understanding what one is doing on a deeper level, as long as it seems to be working (and until it breaks).
Modern views on evolution and on genetics tend to admit that DNA is actually a very vague description, where genes code very general characteristics and not the precise details we used to think they did, leaving a large part for randomness and subjectness to interactions with the environment.
What that basically means is that by trying to "fix" DNA, we are actually reducing the overall possibilies: maybe some bad characteristic won't show up, but probably many more other possibilites won't either, the result of which we have absolutely no idea about.
I'm baffled that some current "professor" does seem to think as though we were 50 or 60 years ago. Grow up!
What if propensity to violence could also translate into greater success at being an athlete, soldier, or an entrepreneur with proper child rearing?! What if propensity to psychopathy could also mean greater aptitude at being a great medical doctor or a CEO? What if propensity to depression and autism could signify a greater sensitivity to arts and intellectual endeavors?!
I am afraid the people in charge of these programs are going to accidentally weed out useful traits in their misguided attempt to improve the human race. They are going to breed a bunch of docile, conformist and consumerist work drones.
Either you get it or you don't. Obviously this professor doesn't get it.
Only 'flamers' flame!
Genetic engineering is certainly capable of advancing the human species, but let's be careful about what we leave behind. Right now, the only thing that judges an individual's genetic suitability is the environment in which the individual must survive to produce copies. But when we deliberately select against certain "defects" by testing for certain genes, we unintentionally select against EVERY trait in which that gene is involved. Geneticists will be the first to tell you that the mapping of genes to traits is a huge mess. For example, if we select against alcoholism, we may inadvertently select against artistic prowess or leadership skill. If we select against a "stupid" gene (if there is such a thing), we may inadvertently select against honesty. Be careful what you wish for. Be VERY careful.
When it comes to biology we are nothing but a bunch of clueless hackers who think our education and fancy titles endow us with the ability to understand or predict the consequences of our actions when no such thing is currently within our reach.
"We can do better than chance" ... Except nobody knows how to design and build anything resembling the capabilities of a human. Until this changes it seems exceedingly foolish to assume we are smarter than evolution.
I agree with one sentiment we are already playing god be it from medical interventions to save those who would have normally died, relative lack of scarcity or detecting serious defects in the unborn.
I can think of no credible way to falisify the in for a penny in for a pound argument mr Pickens makes... we're doing it anyway so why stop now?
Rather than accusing others of making irrational arguments some self reflection might first be in order.
...and ask yourself why we see so few Elm trees lining the streets in America these days. There was a time in this country where a squirrel could travel miles just by jumping from elm to elm. Now most of you have no idea what one looks like.
Genetic diversity protects species from disease. Narrowing the genetic pool to a few, select, faddish traits will be our undoing.
We are at the threshold of genetic knowledge. Twiddling around with things we don't know too much about can easily lead to unintended consequences.
KHAN!!!!!!!!!!
You make 3 very good points. To quote Wikipedia: "Savulescu argues that humanity is on the brink of disappearing in a metaphorical ‘Bermuda Triangle’ – unless certain eugenic steps are taken to correct what he considers to be aberrant human behaviour and overly liberal laws."
Maybe his romanian origins (Romania under the soviet union influence for a long time) could explain some of this. As for me, the sentence above shows that they guy is more of a dangerous politician than a scientist. End of story.
Just read the comments here and then try to decide what "ethically better children" think like. I fear usually it means "thinks like me". What an awful world it would be if we all had our choices made before we were even born. Some of my friends never misuse a substance, and others are doped out alks. There are amazing success stories in both camps. Stop the conformist madness.
I can't imagine many folks aborting because they find out their kid has a chance of colon cancer. Would you?
The primary moral obligation we have toward future babies is to not create them in the first place. I'm not talking about them being subjected to a degraded ecosystem due to our use of fossil fuels, although that's a valid concern. No, I say this on a much more fundamental level:
It is immoral to bring a child into this world because you cannot do so with the child's consent.
How's that for radical? Yes, I know. It's a paradox. Get over it, and stop procreating.
That's why you need more than "barely". Simple molecule, studied for safety... except they didn't test long enough, among enough diverse circumstances, to catch a major issue. Biological systems are orders of magnitude more complex than the things humans normally work with, and are the equivalent of spaghetti code, with just oodles of non-obvious interactions, kludges, and general weirdness.
So no, 'barely' isn't enough. You need 'thoroughly'.
PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
Always makes me think about comedian Tim Allen talking about putting together a new grill, 'and afterwards, you end up with this little bag of really important-looking shit left over. And you go "Honey? Would you try lighting the grill? No no, honey, stop running around like that, it's only making the flames worse!" '
Altering our genes in a way which does not change our inheritable traits is one thing. Once we start trying to cut things out of the human genome forever, I worry that we're going to end up cutting out something we might need generations down the line, and as tends to happen, only discover it when it's too late to do anything about it.
What was that short story about the one of the few non-genetically-engineered teenagers in a school full of kids who’d been engineered to be good-looking and highly intelligent? She catches all kinds of passive-aggressive shit until a dormant flaw manifests in all the GM kids; it ends with her delivering the commencement address calling for empathy for the now-disabled. Or something. I’m drawing a blank.
Yeah, let's genetically engineer and prescreen only the best children. We all know how that works out...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Seed
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Trek_II:_The_Wrath_of_Khan
Perhaps Oxford Professor Julian Savulescu should consider joining the ranks of those who have taken themselves out of the gene pool for the benefit of the rest of us...
http://www.darwinawards.com/
Not "many". ALL. I have never seen (or heard of) one single moral relativist that _even tries_ to be minimally consistent.
If you mention abortion or prostitution, they are all about "don't impose your morality on others". But the instant you mention something they don't like (say, nuclear energy), they change their minds and now say that thing is evil and must be forbidden. And they are not even embarrassed; they don't even appreciate the irony; they don't seem to feel any guilt.
By the way, how does moral relativism translate to a political philosophy? You could say "since morality is relative, we must not interfere with other people's lives" but that would be itself a moral judgment, and therefore relative and non-binding.
You could say "whatever the majority wants, the government must obey" but that is itself a moral judgment, and therefore relative and non-binding.
Tell me how do you _consistently_ base a political philosophy on moral relativism.
I don't think genetically pacifying a valuable survival trait is a good idea. It may also make them unable to defend themselves if under attack.
There seems to be some overlap between 'medicine' and 'eugenics' since anything medical you do to a person artificially influences the survival of their children (even after they are born, medical care for your parents still can affect your child's fitness, for example). I guess the question should be more one of "how much MORE eugenics should we do without feeling weird about it....?"
"'Whether we like it or not,
the future of humanity is in our hands now.
Rather than fearing genetics,
we should embrace it. We can
do better than chance.'
Earth, Hitler, 1938. "
-- Captain James T. Kirk:
The interaction between unfit genes and the rest seems impossibly complicated. It's the height of silly human hubris to think that scientists can even come clost to approximating billions of years of incremental improvements.
The proposed genetic monoculture sounds ripe for destruction by a currently-rare disease. I wonder what Darwin would think about manual manipulation of unfit genes.
$
Until we eliminate it from the equation. Proclaiming we know everything there is to know about genetics, while maintaining that the majority of our genes are comprised of "junk DNA" is poking a stick at nature. The people that would play roulette with the future of the human race, unfortunately will have zero accountability in the next thousand years. While i don't propose we go back to worshipping sun gods, I do think we have a lot more observational science to practice before rushing headlong into the engineering aspects Acting responsibley without the capability of neong responsible iss the moral dillema
You know, just because science figures out something that could make our lives better doesn't mean that it will be misused. To automatically refute advances in medicine puts you squarely in the realm of the Luddite. Someone like you was saying that soap is an unhealthy and unholy invention a couple thousand years ago.
HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
Wouldn't the DNA for durum semolina be the ultimate spaghetti code?
Scientists, politicians and religious people who gave us eugenics, forced sterilization and death camps?
I'd go on a Vegan diet but the delivery time from Vega is too long. --brownkitty
Nazi ethics :-)
Another problem is that personality traits like "selfishness" are a. hard to define and b. have some degree, maybe 100 percent, of a social, not genetic basis. Hack DNA to eliminate, for example, something like an alleged "propensity to violence"? They'll start with the slaves, of course.
In yesteryear harmful mutations were selected out. Nowadays we can accommodate more and more disability with technology and social support. Probably someone could work out the date, but it's inevitable that without selection the human race genome will eventually degrade to making a pile a protoplasm with all accrued genetic damage. It's either select out or die out. Helluva choice I know, but..
Perhaps there is a genetic basis for things like belief in individual sovereignty, private property and voluntary exchange. Breed that out by prohibiting the non-college educated to reproduce. For those who see morality in science should be shown the gallows that hung eleven men at Nuernberg. It's too late. Eugenics must continue to bear eternal stain if the human species are not to forfeit its privilege to exist.
Next time people start thinking of species improvement, it's time to stick those heads in the tin cans of blue crumbs without the warning odorant.
Eugenics has been common since before the socialist movement. The premise we can improve the population by apply selective forces such as breeding to the gene pool. I believe if we move forward with this the benefit will be minimal. We will be able to pull out traits of hereditary but to say we can fix alcoholism, or a myriad of other problems that relate to the symbiotic relationship between the world and oneself is asinine. Look at the understanding of intelligence, how are we going to be able to solve anything if we can't even disgusting the system behind why some are smarter than others?
Then there is the other problem of mutation which this type of "fixing" won't solve. It is also arguably we shouldn't solve it. As you can tell the world changes, if our goal is to create a model human and we do so through removal of mutation we will bottleneck genetics against other future problems. It would lead to a situation where we would have to entirely rely on medical fields' ability to solve problems if the case arises. It is easy to imagine a world where the population encounters a mutation of plague, ebola, bird flu, etc but yet because of genetic screening a mutation that could of saved various populations just disappears.
and what its affects are, is not understood very well. Furthermore, from e genomic stand point, researchers are not sure what disease free actually means.
Tinkering with genes on purpose will more than likely have consequences, some of them highly undesirable I would suspect.
Genomic research is in its infancy, and we should hold off for another 100 years as the field develops and more is understood. We simply do not have enough wisdom or knowledge to make a decision right now on how to control the human genome.
Furthermore, humanity hasn't risen to the level where all races can participate equally in such decisions. Until that happens, laws should be put in place to prevent genetic manipulation of offspring.
-Hack
Got Geometrodynamics? Awe, too hard to figure out? Too bad.
Would Hemingway have been Hemingway without the depression and alcoholism?
I don't know, and neither does this guy.
You're complaining about producing more women? What are ya, nuts?
Sure, get rid of the randomness in evolution, the perfect path to extinction.
Check your history. Most of the ideological nuttery of the last 100 years comes from extremist left wing lunacy.
Yay, a way to avoid genetic defects. It is just a short step to eugenics. Human experience in selective breeding of lower animals has resulted in unintended consequences: physiological deformities and psychological flaws. But there is worse to come:
The movie "Gattica" describes a society based upon genetic superiority. The novel "Brave new world" provides a more complete description with ''worker drones' and a society without responsibilities to other people.
If we can modify every woman without genetic side-effects, to have a size 10 (EUR/AUS) figure with big breasts and blonde hair, humans will simply discriminate on some other characteristic. Alternatives such as wealth or eduction or employment will lead us to the society we already have.
Genetic conformity may be limited because it results in a superiority of uniqueness. Such as Sweden where dark-haired women become more attractive because of the multitude of blonde-haired women.
Nature always wins.
They could cull out conservatism. To me that's one of the bigger mental disorders out there.
Sorry for bringing fiction into Real Life, but wouldn't the good of ALL humanity outweigh the good of the individual human? Seriously. Asimov made a good play for a zero'th law. ( Yeah, bah, I'm too lazy to go look up how he wrote it. Bite me. ) Is this TRULY what we want? Everyone choosing what is best for THEIR children, at the cost of what is best for humanity? Travolta, you need to build an organization, QUICKLY, to make sure that custom babies are blown to bits, preferably with LNNW ( no more ball bearings!), just to be sure. You know? Olivaw to the Rescue!!! Olivaw for President!!! (For the humour impaired, get a clue. )
The thing about babies is that you can't (yet) alter individual stats, you just have to re-roll a new character. Sometimes it's better to take the -5 weakness to fire if it's balanced out by really high intelligence or strength, rather than waiting forever to generate the perfect battlemage.
Whose ethics? Nothing good ever comes out of playing god...
Everyone with the same personality traits, missing what makes us diverse and unique? I don't know, sounds like he wants the human race to be cattle primed for slaughter. Check the professor's dna is he human?
I read somewhere that flaws like paranoia could be an asset in times of crisis
Those without any paranoia are more likely be "sheeples" and they will blindly walk into a slaughterhouse waiting to be slaughtered
Those who are paranoid - oh yes, the world often laugh at them - may choose to not enter the slaughterhouse, and thus spared
I also read that flaws like depression could be useful too
Depressed people have much less spontaneity than those who are not depressed. Because of that, they are less likely to do spontaneous things, - like jumping over a drainage, for example - thus, are less likely to suffer injury that could have been prevented
Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
One of the key things most people still don't understand is how environment shapes people's perceptions of their surroundings.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Z9WVZddH9w&t=9m10s
It depends on who holds the patents.
The mind conceives, the body achieves, the spirit manifests.
This ethicist is out of his field and should talk to his psychology department. Genetic markers for alcoholism, psychopathy, and disposition to violence, depression, etc. are activated as a response to early childhood trauma.Lots of people carry genes that would have made them a sociopath if they had experienced trauma as a child. The people that carry these genes are also much more magnanimous, socially well adjusted, and supportive of their family and friends if they don't experience trauma in childhood.
If we want to reduce the number of maladjusted people we need to allocate more resources to improve women's education, prenatal and neonatal care, early childhood development, and poverty.
""It's all in the genes", an explanation for the way things are that does not threaten the way things are. Why should someone feel unhappy or engage in antisocial behavior when the person is living in the freest and most prosperous nation on earth? It can't be the system! There must be a flaw in the wiring somewhere."
Designer babies = less genetic variability???? WHA?????
We know which genes we are trying to eliminate. What makes you think we can't put it back later?
Each gene could be stored digitally in a world wide database, ready for synthesis at any time, and any place.
Furthermore, in the future people will be able to change their genetic composition AFTER birth using a combination of viral medications and genetic salves.
The real problem will be patenting, but save that for another discussion.
Choice will give us more options and variability. Not everyone wants to have blonde hair and blue eyes. Goto Asia and look at all the people dying their hair brown, blonde, and blue (and purple and red).
Provided we safe guard our genetic resources, we have a moral obligation to mutate our offspring.
We'll never make it.......oh! we made it! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SWf3iJjqYCM&list=FL7kKrE4eTs17mQl7eyvJIOg
...for dereliction of duty. You do not genetically engineer ethics. Morals and ethics need to be inculcated and taught, not bred. The ethicist's way encourages parental irresponsibility. Is he serious? If people choose to bring other people into existence, they should be mature enough to know ethics and teach ethics to the children. If you aren't responsible enough to bring up a child, don't have one. There are plenty of children who don't have homes or food to eat, and a lot of them would learn ethics if only there was someone to teach them. You don't need to engineer new babies, you need to first bring up the existing ones the right way.
I will do one better than the faker: you should require a permit to have a child, just like you need to prove you are fit to drive a car, you need to prove you are capable of being responsible for another individual's well-being. We don't need genetic engineering, we need people to be responsible.
I beg to submit that your so-called "ethicist" is full of excreta.
If it were not for his professorship at Oxford, natural selection would have weeded him out from the career pool.
captcha: cemetery
http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2009/12/the-science-of-success/307761/
"Most of us have genes that make us as hardy as dandelions: able to take root and survive almost anywhere. A few of us, however, are more like the orchid: fragile and fickle, but capable of blooming spectacularly if given greenhouse care. So holds a provocative new theory of genetics, which asserts that the very genes that give us the most trouble as a species, causing behaviors that are self-destructive and antisocial, also underlie humankind's phenomenal adaptability and evolutionary success. With a bad environment and poor parenting, orchid children can end up depressed, drug-addicted, or in jail -- but with the right environment and good parenting, they can grow up to be society's most creative, successful, and happy people."
So, rather than address issues of society making good parenting difficult, it sounds like this "ethicist" would just terminate in advance all the children at risk of "potential alcoholism" who just need good parenting and good societies to blossom in -- places with walking trails (see "Blue Zones"), with people getting vitamin-D from sunlight, lots of cheap vegetables and healthy fats like omegas-3s, with toxins like many artifical colors and flavors excluded from the food supply, and so on... As Dr. Fuhrman says in "Eat to Live", genes may give us weak links, but how much those links are pulled on is a function of diet and lifestyle (and upbringing).
Note also that nature is often more concerned about parasite resistance and disease resistance than many other factors this ethicist might focus on instead -- so that ethicist's plan put in practice might produce a society of great-looking high-IQ people who collapse at the first sniffle. Just look at what industrial breeding of tomatoes has brought us as far as what you see in your typical supermarket (compared to heirloom varieties).
It's sad what passes for overly-cerebral "ethics" these days (as much as I too might have said much the same when I was younger, brought up in a hyper-competitive US culture); here is part of why that is (but a bunch more is just a cultural pendulum swinging perhaps):
http://disciplinedminds.com/
http://www.johntaylorgatto.com/chapters/11b.htm
"The eugenics movement begun by Galton in England was energetically spread to the United States by his followers. Besides destroying lesser breeds (as they were routinely called) by abortion, sterilization, adoption, celibacy, two-job family separations, low-wage rates to dull the zest for life, and, above all, schooling to dull the mind and debase the character, other methods were clinically discussed in journals, including a childlessness which could be induced through easy access to pornography.2 At the same time those deemed inferior were to be turned into eunuchs, Galtonians advocated the notion of breeding a super race. Humanist Scott Nearing wrote his masterpiece, The Super Race: An American Problem, in 1912, just as the drive to destroy an academic curriculum in public schools was reaching its first crescendo. By "problem," Nearing wasn't referring to a moral dilemma. Rather, he was simply arguing that only America had the resources to meet the engineering challenge posed in creating supermen out of genetic raw stock."
Gatto suggests even the reason school rooms were called "class rooms" is linked with the eugenics notion that "classes" of people kept together would end up breeding with the same class, to produce superior offspring for the high ranked classes, and easily exploitable and disposable ones for the lower ranked ones.
As you say, today's defect can be tomorrow's salvation. There seems to be plenty of room for more people with more unique ideas and perspectives as part of a global (or someday galaxy-wide) cooperative discussion:
A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.
I'm going to draw a lot of flack here, but I strongly believe that for many (not all) decision regarding future human beings, the parent are the last ones who should decide. Simple truth of the matter is that nobody is further away from objective evaluation than hormone-swamped people with built-in motherly and fatherly love.
Look at disabled children brought into the world with full knowledge of their genetic defects and severe consequences for their entire lives. There is no rational explanation for allowing that to happen, all the explanations are irrational: Either religion ("do not interfere with gods mysterious ways") or psycho-babble ("but it is our child and we'll love it no matter how it is").
There are some conditions where I consider it cruel to bringt that child into the world. It will be suffering its entire life. Abort it and make a new one if you are a loving parent.
Now TFA simply extends that to psychological, etc. defects. That's a bit SciFi and a bit nonsense because on most of those we do not yet know how much and what effect precisely the genetic component plays. But imagine it works, at least for some. What's the ethical consequences? I don't have a full answer, but I do have first-hand experience with someone mentally ill. Not genetically caused in this case, but for the thought-experiment assuming it would were. I must honestly say that I'm not sure. The amount of pain and suffering caused to both the ill one and everyone close was tremendous and long-term. I can not imagine any ethically defensible argument to abstain from prevent such things to happen, except that the actions required would be even worse. That certainly is true for murder, but then we're back at the irrational arguments where abortion and murder are equated, which rests on irrational definitions of life, personality and entity/beings.
And before you hit me with a reply, keep in mind that common sense is what tells us that the world is flat. Don't make "it feels wrong" an argument, because it isn't. Not in either direction - slavery or force marriages of very young girls didn't feel wrong for most of human history. Saying that your imaginary friend actually is imaginary, but not much of a friend, on the other hand, did.
Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
It shouldn't suprise anyone, because it started in the US to begin with. But it looks like it has a new advocate in the 21st century.
How someone could call themselves an ethiscist and recommend this is beyond me.
The mean IQ is always 100.
"They'll swing back to the belief that they can make people... better. And I do not hold to that. " - Captain Malcom Reynolds
so-called designer babies could be considered a 'moral obligation' as it makes them grow up into 'ethically better children' and that we should actively give parents the choice to screen out personality flaws in their children such as critical thinking, questioning authority, and thinking for oneself. 'So where genetic selection aims to bring out a trait that clearly benefits the corporations, government and society Surely trying to ensure that your children have the best, or a good enough, opportunity to be a slave
There fixed that for ya!
'Whether we like it or not, the future of humanity is in our hands now
Yes and I don't want you fucking with it.
that we already know that by manipulating a particular gene is going to have an entirely predictable outcome...
Sure, you've removed a gene that has an associated risk of disease x with it; WHAT ELSE have you removed in doing this ?
The answer, of course is, that they do not know.
The biggest problem with technologists is the tendency to not admit when there is a simple question. When we just do not know.
And they want to make real, Frankenstein people?
The problem underscored in the actual Frankenstein story -- the hubris of (many) scientists, who assume that all they know is everything that *can* be known -- is redolent throughout this notion of genetically modified people.
Go watch Jurassic Park a few more times, Dr. Savulescu.
The article specifically talks about preventing things like alcoholism, psychopathy, and being overly disposed to violence. I am all for handling these traits. Why the heck is everyone in comments talking about breeding supermen? The article isn't talking about that. I believe it is perfectly right and moral to handle these traits and then stop there without going for supermen or even designer height hair colors (actually, I don't particularly care about the latter).
Am I play God screening for these traits? I don't think so, but at the same time if it is God's job to prevent alcoholism and other addicitons and psychopathy; He sure is doing a poor job of it. Those specifically addressed issues are harmful states much like cancers that would do well to be screened out.
Going further, as someone who is bipolar, if the doctors could promise me that my first born wouldn't suffer from the same severe emotional swings that I've had to deal with and medicate for most of my life; I'ld say "do it" before asking what the bill would be. I imagine alcoholics would be in the same boat, as it is something commonly hereditary that one wished never happened to them and don't want to see your kid go through.
Now, beyond that; breeding a separate class of supermen that is especially only accessible to the rich is a bad thing. I'll be happy to argue against it when someone suggests it, but would prefer to see cogent arguments to what is wrong with what is specifically being proposed.
I remember a science fiction short story about a person that was a throwback to normal humans. I think the story was called "Kindness". As the one of the last "normal" humans, he was so far behind intellectuall, they put him in a sort of leper colony with others like him. I don't remember however if the "others" like him were in fact really just like him, or just actors making him feel at home.
I also forget who the sci-fi author was, but I think it was one of the famous ones from the 1950s.
Tracy Johnson
Old fashioned text games hosted below:
http://empire.openmpe.com/
BT
This paradigm of modern medicine and intervention is so utterly fallacious it boggles the mind for anyone who actually knows how the body works, what causes disease and genetic damage and what can prevent it. They are cutting off someones legs, then claiming it's morally necessary to give them robotic legs, cut the arms off as well, and use the severed legs in place of the arms because "it will enable faster running". That's literally how stupid these people are, and yet no one sees it. One day this will be viewed as utterly barbaric and retarded beyond imagining. There is more merit in bloodletting, but again, no one will see that. When you base your ethics and arguments off a false premise that you erroneously left behind a thousand logical turns back down the path from where you are now at, of course it's going to appear logical. But it isn't, it's still just a fairy tale as any fallacious conclusion is, and no amount of arguing off a false base will make it so. Stupidity stupidity stupidity - beyond my wildest imaginings and then some. Literally to my mind challenging the incomprehensibility of infinity itself. "This does not bode well".
It's strange how most slahdotters are fundamentally Luddites. Controlling for genes that are linked to alcoholism or schizophrenia are no-brainer ways of employing technology. Parents already make decisions on a wide range of items that will affect their children well into adulthood from their diet to whether they will be sexually mutilated (circumcised) and society has no problems with it.
It's worth noting that Down's syndrome, while "genetic", isn't "heritable". You can't be a "carrier" for Down's syndrome. There are no families who are "predisposed" to Down's syndrome. It's just a freak thing that becomes increasingly more likely with the age of the mother. Or, more specifically, becomes more likely as the quality of her ova declines. If every Down's baby were aborted it wouldn't reduce the number of Down's babies conceived. (It would, obviously, reduce the number of Down's babies born).
You get rid of all OCD and Autism genetic tendencies...
And who the hell is going to be left to write software?!?!?!
Who is this ethicist expert, and why are we listening to him?
... no comment
Free speech was meant to be free for all... how can anyone grow up in a nanny state ?
This guy does not believe he was created by God. Do you? This expert is only fooling himself. Has he fooled you?
Abstract
Abortion is largely accepted even for reasons that do not have anything to do with the fetus' health. By showing that (1) both fetuses and newborns do not have the same moral status as actual persons, (2) the fact that both are potential persons is morally irrelevant and (3) adoption is not always in the best interest of actual people, the authors argue that what we call ‘after-birth abortion’ (killing a newborn) should be permissible in all the cases where abortion is, including cases where the newborn is not disabled.
Here's the link to make sure you don't think I am just a troll
The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
From some of the comments around here I'd say we're all looking for the perfect corporate employee. Not too dumb, not too smart. Remember when people used to say that between genius and insanity there's a very thin line? Well, maybe there is and maybe, by having fewer insane people, we'll have fewer geniuses.
THE CONFORMITY SCIENTISTS CROWD REARS ITS UGLY HEAD AGAIN! Nope Prozac et al was not enough... Lesson in THAT. Couldn't even make the. neuro - conformity. Drugs work!
Inherently IMMORAL. and logistically can't do it... Imagine the HORRORS coming out of the trying. .... non anonymous coward KIDDO. MARI SLOANE
Perhaps the good professor will teach classes on ethics at Monsanto, I think they may have missed a few while they majored in, "How to Own Food", "How to Hide Studies Showing Your Products Cause Disease", "How to Give Outrageously Large Bribes to Congress Legally", and "How to Eliminate Family Farms Legally".
In other words, who will monitor the companies who sell these products, to make sure they get long term testing, and ensure that they are as safe as we know how to make them? Of course there will probably always be unintended consequences, but we have to at least do our very best. Read, "Seeds of Deception" if you want to know how corrupt, and dangerous a GM company can get.
I think the professor is either very naive (unlikely) or disingenuous (taking money from industry he is promoting).
I don't feel as though it would be in a country's best interest to genetically engineer children because as far as I can tell, geneticists don't know enough about the way it works to even cure some genetic problems that seem like that would be easy to cure. Take for instances Epidermolysis Bullosa. It seems as though it would be easy to cure, given that a close relative donate some of their stemcells to do some testing because it has to do with the way the layers of skin adhere to one another, but the problem is we don't know enough about the way these things work to do this yet. Should we genetically engineer children without knowing for sure if the process we use will cause more harm to a child than good, and it would not be wise to try to be like the spartans and kill the ones that come out a little different. Surprisingly enough, there are a good number of people with problems that occurred throughout their lifetimes with problems caused by genetics that have played a major role in shaping science and our society in general to be what it is today, good or bad. It sounds like a great idea, like heroin or pcp, which were originally used to treat horrible pain and to put people under anethesia. Then, later on, they were deemed to be mostly unfit for the use in humans because of long living effects afterwards. How then could we learn more about genetic engineering? Well, there have been several experiments in which a person donated their own stem cells for research for a cure for their untreatable disease. There is a difference between this and using an unborn child to get the cells or as an experiment, and yes, I agree there may be a situation where an unborn child would be born in such a condition where it would be very cruel to allow it's birth. But, I think that this is a judgement call that should have a very well informed and ethical doctor in charge. Like it may be merciful to mercy kill someone by not extending their life support for thirty years after they are brain dead. The problem is that at times people wake up from 30 year brain dead comas, and it would not be wise to turn the machine off on every brain dead person, same with an unborn child. So that's a very fine line that geneticists would be walking, and it's questionable whether or not it's a call for a person at all to make in the first place.
Come on, you were thinking that too. The more we know, the more we screen for, the closer we get to a managed genetic pool.
because whatever you chose for them, the will always hate your choice.
It seems the original source of this is not the Telegraph article, but: http://www.readersdigest.co.uk/magazine/readers-digest-main/the-maverick-its-our-duty-to-have-designer-babies
An expert in "practical" ethics? Wudda mealy mouthful.. So how does that work anyways? Get rid of anything that might be misconstrued as "real" ethics (such as do no murder, do not bear false witness, do not touch your neighbor's ass (even if she is pretty)) , and 'invent' your own? So how does making up your *own* ethics deserve a degree? And how does one become an 'expert' at making up their own rules? As Bugs said (and he's as good an 'expert' as anyone else) Wudda Maroon...
Am I the only one who noted the eerie similarity between "Savulescu" and "Volescu," the geneticist that created protagonist Bean in Ender's Shadow?
Until we get marooned on Ceti Alpha VI by some agressive, swaggering jerk who wasn't part of the program.
No thanks, I've seen how this one ends.
You know who else had great ideas like this?
Hitler.
Switzerland, like the rest of western europe has not had 500 years of democracy and peace. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Switzerland_in_the_Napoleonic_era
I haven't read ALL the comments, but are we talking about behavior purely as a consequence of biology? The medical model is worrisome, as it doesn't account for environment, childhood, parenting, upbringing, morality, abuse, inherited mentality, etc.
Aren't these factors at least as significant as the biological implications of ones DNA? How can one be discussed without the other?
All the selection in the world won't help a child who grows up in an unethical, dysfunctional, personality disordered household. Will DNA selection weed out creationism? Predjudice? Greed?
I think not. Our problems are social.
Nothing could be truer and more important than the statement this researcher made.
Look at our most pressing problems, they are all caused by human nature . What IS human nature? It's whatever evolution shit out its ass over the course of a few hundred millions years. What was (and is) evolution's goal? Make something, anything, that lives long enough in its environment to reproduce itself as much as possible. Full stop.
We evolved in a resource constrained environment in which we had to compete for those resources in order to survive. So we have a genetic mandate to see the world and the things in it as prizes in a zero sum game, and this impulse of ours admits of no limits and knows no boundaries whatsoever, moral or otherwise.
The evidence is all around you . Just to snatch the latest headlines, look at the LIBOR scandal. This is a broad criminal conspiracy on the part of the most privileged, most educated, most well-off, most secure segment of a first world society which itself enjoys the most stability, the most food security, the highest standard of living of any in all of human history. And yet, these Brooks Brother wearing, extraordinarily successful members of that society are hungry for more.
This is what human beings are. This is the underlying force driving all of human history. The hypothetical, counterfactual alternative is laughable on the face of it: instead of war, humans work with fervor to make sure everyone has what they need and when that's accomplished they set about with equal determination to attack our few remaining foes - natural disaster and disease.
Men want to copulate with as many desirable females as they can in order to make as many copies of their genes as they can. This is their genetic heritage and it knows no limits. Females greatly prefer men who have power and resources and stature to men who don't because it facilitates the survival of their offspring . This is their genetic heritage. So we have Genghis Khan seeding his way across Asia leaving 1 in 200 Asians alive today as direct descendants of him and his kin. So we have Arnold and Kennedy and Elliot Spitzer the Republican Congressman or Senator of your choice unable to control their impulses despite hat amounts to personal dynasties being imperiled because the whole purpose of personal dynasty making is to provide increased access to desirable females. Not fucking everything that isn't nailed down would e like starting a business and then eschewing the profits.
You can talk about genetic engineering in terms of criminality and sociopathy all your want, but the fact is that what counts as sociopathy changes with the times . There's a great scene in Clockwork Orange where Alex is daydreaming about being a Roman Centurion and whipping Christ a few times as trudges by with the cross on his back on the way to Calvary. What Kubric is saying is, as bad as Alex seems to us, the same personality type was a well adjusted member of society in Roman times. What is changing society now and determining whose "in" and who's "out" is technology and specifically the ability of a small band of humans to inflict their will not merely on every other human on the planet, and not merely temporarily, but for all future time and all future people. By leveraging the collective but hierarchical power of the corporation and the systematic abasement and perversion of lawmaking through "campaign contributions" (Citizens United being just the most recent example of an enabler in this context) , the impulse to have more, to accumulate greater and greater amounts of wealth and power at the expense of all future human generations has reached its self destructive peak forward of which point there is either radical reform or oblivion.
And if there is going to be radical reform, if we're going to survive, how exactly is that we're going to change? Are we going to shore up our democratic institutions ? Is that working now
"These are just a few of the images we've recorded. And you can see, it wasn't what we thought. There's been no war here and no terraforming event. The environment is stable. It's the Pax. The G-23 Paxilon Hydrochlorate that we added to the air processors. It was supposed to calm the population, weed out aggression. Well, it works. The people here stopped fighting. And then they stopped everything else. They stopped going to work, they stopped breeding, talking, eating. There's 30 million people here, and they all just let themselves die."
He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
"I'm sure people predicted the same thing about vaccinations. (And some people still think they're right.)"
Quoted for truth (and +2 karma)
It looks like they're trying to make up for lost time.
Why a choice? What ethical objection could there to making in utero gene therapy mandatory? Parents who refuse to treat an illness their child comes down with are charged with abuse and neglect. What's the difference?
Any trait that is subpar to what can be achieved through medicine can rationally be called a "disease".
Why should anyone have to be born into this world to suffer? Without gene therapy the argument that a life, any life is better than nothing at all and so you shouldn't abort. But give it time and gene therapy will be available and practical and you can simply edit the baby in the womb.
And of course mandatory means we have to make it "free", but of course we should. If we don't make it free that would exacerbate class differences, and your genetics is clearly a component of your health, so countries that have universal health care systems should logically include gene therapy once it's available.
There will still be plenty of room for diversity. As long as genes that are different code for some kind of tradeoff so that neither trait can be said to be objectively better or worse the individual parents could take their pick or leave it alone.
'Surely trying to ensure that your children have the best, or a good enough, opportunity for a great life is responsible parenting?' Yeah, certainly - wouldn't we all be happier if we'd always behaved exactly the way our parents thought we should?
It seems to me that most of the people I know who are really happy with their lives went through a very dark period at some point - in many cases, that dark period helped them learn how to make friends with their demons and become stronger and more whole individuals as a result. They didn't get there by surgically removing the parts of themselves they didn't like.
This isn't about the child's happiness - it's about the parents'. It's about saving parents who have never dealt with their own issues from having to face those same issues in their children ("gee, Doc, I don't know how our child has so many alcoholic/violent/psychopathic genes in there, but we for damned sure didn't have anything to do with it"). Responsible parenting, indeed.