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Enhancing Evolution

The Ethical Case for Making Better People

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Decisive biotechnological interventions aimed at enhancing human bodies and brains have faced significant ethical rejection and hostility. In this work, leading bioethicist John Harris dismantles objections to genetic engineering, stem-cell research, designer babies, and cloning, making a compelling ethical case for biotechnology to improve human life. Harris argues that human enhancement is not only morally good but also beneficial for individuals, social policy, and our genetic heritage, which he believes requires improvement. He defends interventions that could lead to longer, healthier, and happier lives, such as immunity from diseases like cancer and HIV/AIDS. However, the book goes beyond mere therapies for sickness and disability; it advocates for influencing the course of evolution to enhance mental and physical capabilities, including reasoning, memory, strength, and stamina. Harris asserts that enhancing ourselves is not just morally defensible but, in some cases, a moral obligation. Regardless of one's perspective on biotechnology—whether hopeful, fearful, or ambivalent—this work presents an argument that is impossible to overlook.

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Enhancing Evolution, John Harris

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Année de publication
2007
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Titre
Enhancing Evolution
Sous-titre
The Ethical Case for Making Better People
Langue
Anglais
Publié
2007
Format
rigide
Pages
242
ISBN10
0691128448
ISBN13
9780691128443
Séries
Évaluation
3,45 sur 5
Description
Decisive biotechnological interventions aimed at enhancing human bodies and brains have faced significant ethical rejection and hostility. In this work, leading bioethicist John Harris dismantles objections to genetic engineering, stem-cell research, designer babies, and cloning, making a compelling ethical case for biotechnology to improve human life. Harris argues that human enhancement is not only morally good but also beneficial for individuals, social policy, and our genetic heritage, which he believes requires improvement. He defends interventions that could lead to longer, healthier, and happier lives, such as immunity from diseases like cancer and HIV/AIDS. However, the book goes beyond mere therapies for sickness and disability; it advocates for influencing the course of evolution to enhance mental and physical capabilities, including reasoning, memory, strength, and stamina. Harris asserts that enhancing ourselves is not just morally defensible but, in some cases, a moral obligation. Regardless of one's perspective on biotechnology—whether hopeful, fearful, or ambivalent—this work presents an argument that is impossible to overlook.