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Sep 08th
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Law Three

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Law 3:   A person's form, including their genome, embryo, or body cannot be subjected to non-therapeutic inheritable alteration or enhancement.

With the deciphering of the Human genome, biotechnology has enabled our species to change itself into something other . . . something more than homo-sapien. The philosophy of  Transhumanism symbolizes their objective with the sign H+ meaning humanity enhanced. Not only can we enhance the species, but we can introduce these changes into germline reproduction so that the changes are passed on to succeeding generations. Bruce Sterling, American science fiction author and activist  said, "Maybe we're about to radically change the operating system of the human condition. If so, then this would be a really good time to make backups of our civilization." Human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe," said H. G. Wells. In 1896 he launched the era of the science fiction genre with the release of "The Island of Dr. Moreau." Readers were horrified that science might someday produce human-animal hybrids called chimeras. In 1896 it was safely science fiction, today it is just science.

"The relatively new field of bioethics runs on the motor of boundary-breaking science. As university scientists craft pig-people and “humanzees,” as pregnancy.com offers women the opportunity to terminate for sex selection “before they show,” some moral philosophers and theologians seek to call a halt by digging into the definitive markers of humanness.

There are thus various voices shouting Enough! in the United States. Drawing on different strands within Western philosophy and theology, American scholars who agree on little else find themselves eager to cooperate to delineate the boundaries of truly human life. McKibben’s eco-interrogation of medical technology Enough: Staying Human in an Engineered Age has become a key text for lefties suspicious about unfettered biotech. Warning in particular about human germline genetic intervention, McKibben suggests that post-genetic enhancement generations may be, in an important sense, no longer human; grandchildren will no longer be the same sort of creatures as their grandparents. In the face of this disconnect with our primordial genetic heritage, it is time to say Enough, for, McKibben concludes, “We’re [already] capable of the further transformations necessary to redeem the world.”1

Amy Laura Hall, Ph.D., is Assistant Professor of Theological Ethics at Duke Divinity School in Durham, North Carolina.

 

 

Books and Publications

The Emerging Brave New World

by Thomas Glessner

Beginning in 1973 with the infamous Roe v. Wade decision American society has increasingly accepted the concept that humanity can be divorced from personhood and thereby some human beings can be manipulated and destroyed for the selfish gains of others because they are not considered "persons.”

 

 

How to be a Christian in a Brave New World

by Joni Eareckson Tada and Nigel Cameron

This book serves as a guidebook for believers, to awaken their interest, offer practical help, enable them to think through big questions in light of Scripture, and prepare them for the greatest issue of the 21st century: our new power to redesign human nature and determine the boundaries of human life through abortion, cloning, euthanasia, eugenics, and robotics.