|
26th
July, 2006
MAL
FLETCHER
It’s
a fact: we’re standing on the threshold of a whole new
era in science. The discoveries that lay just around the next
corner will probably dwarf all the great developments of the
last century. The big technologies of this age could change
forever the very makeup of the human being.
Last week, US President George W. Bush declared that he will
use his right of presidential veto to knock down any legislation
allowing human stem cell research. Is he overreacting?
 |
PICTURE:
xlucas (www.sxc.hu)
"Some
scientists like to talk as if they’re making
infallible pronouncements that we should take on face
value. But they can’t possibly predict the future
effects of their technologies, especially where things
are moving as quickly as they are with genetics."
|
In
the last 10 years, scientists have been doing a lot of work
with germline genetic engineering. Working with animal embryos,
researchers add or subtract sections of their DNA to produce
particular outcomes.
The goal, of course, is to do the same with people, to shape
human characteristics that are affected by our genes, such
as intelligence, sporting ability and even emotional stability.
For all the hype surrounding these developments, philosophers
and theologians question whether scientific advance always
leads to a better society. Are scientific progress and human
advancement really one and the same thing? The problem is
not with the science itself but with the moral, ethical and
practical consequences of using our knowledge.
For quite a long time now, novelists like Michael Crichton
(Jurassic Park) and Mary Shelley (Dr. Frankenstein’s
Monster) have reminded us that scientists are fallible human
beings: they can’t see into the future any more than
you are I.
Some scientists like to talk as if they’re making infallible
pronouncements that we should take on face value. But they
can’t possibly predict the future effects of their technologies,
especially where things are moving as quickly as they are
with genetics.
Anthropologists want to know what new genetic technologies
will do to families and communities. In some nations, female
babies are often aborted for cultural reasons, such as the
fact that parents must pay a high dowry price to marry off
their female children.
As a result, there’s a huge imbalance between the male
and female populations in these nations. What will happen
if people are able to genetically engineer the sex of their
children?
Some authorities warn that genetic selection techniques may
lead to a new apartheid. Genetically enhanced people may one
day be separated from their natural-born counterparts and
given special privileges - as in the movie Gattaca.
Lawmakers
will face major challenges, too. Will marriage partners try
to stop one another from using embryonic gene treatments?
Will children sue their biological parents for not giving
them a better gene structure? The mind boggles!
Being a parent is already pretty demanding. But imagine how
stressful it will be in a world of ‘designer babies’,
where we struggle to keep up with the genetically modified
Joneses. Most of us have enough trouble choosing the colour
of our next car. How will we cope with choices that will affect
our child’s personality or intelligence?
And what happens when child number two or three comes along
and new genetic features are available? Do we inject upgrade
‘patches’ into our older kids, or just learn to
say, ‘Why can’t you be more like your younger
brother?’
What
will happen to the way we see human sexuality? Sex has already
been stripped of much of its mystical significance. Now we’re
stripping sex of its importance in reproduction too, especially
as some companies strive to develop artificial human wombs
and even artificial sperm and eggs.
As reproduction moves from the bedroom to the laboratory,
sex may be seen as nothing more than just another pleasure
drug.
Perhaps the greatest reason to be cautious is that genetic
technologies will impact on our basic humanity. If some people
get their way, we may soon see the McDonaldisation of human
reproduction. Genetically modified DNA sequences will be patented
and sold to those who can afford them.
"Perhaps
the greatest reason to be cautious is that genetic
technologies will impact on our basic humanity. If
some people get their way, we may soon see the McDonaldisation
of human reproduction. Genetically modified DNA sequences
will be patented and sold to those who can afford
them."
|
Reproductive
technologies may show up some of the worst characteristics
of our human nature - the desire for control, for one. We’ve
had some success in getting control over our physical environment,
but we want more.
Reproductive technologies will allow us to control our children
- even before they’ve arrived. Is that healthy? Does
young Johnny really want to know that we meddled with his
makeup even before he was born?
Gene manipulation can be eugenics by another name. In the
last century, ethnic cleansing took place through guns and
bombs. This century may produce ethnic cleansing via the test-tube.
You might think I’m just being alarmist. But we honestly
have no way of knowing how the genetic changes we make today
will play out in the world of our children’s children.
We’re making decisions that will affect many generations
to come. Can we take that kind of responsibility?
There will always be a compassionate reason to release some
new technology quickly. But compassion without moral parameters
is only sentimentality - and it’s dangerous. When there
are momentous issues at stake we must slow down and consider
the big picture.
Modern science grew largely out of respect for the idea of
rational, orderly design found in the Christian worldview.
C. S. Lewis wrote: "Men became scientific because they
expected law in nature, and they expected law in nature because
they believed in a law-maker".
Today, Western science is largely cut off from the guiding
principles of theology. So its technology often disconnects
knowledge from wisdom.
The kind of pragmatism that seems to rule much of science
today says, ‘If a thing can be done, it should be done
- even if we haven’t shown how it pan out in the long
run.’ But one of the things that makes us human - different
from other creatures - is that we can ‘decide not to
do something we are capable of doing.’
Our morality is part of what defines us, and morality is all
about choices we make between what we could do and what we
should do.
The Biblical prophet Moses wrote that ‘Man doesn’t
live by bread alone; but by every word that comes from the
mouth of God.’ Another way to read that is to say that
human beings can’t function simply at a material level
– they need to interact with the divine, on a spiritual
level.
With the rush to develop genetic techniques, we must become
accountable to something higher than human expediency.
"With
the rush to develop genetic techniques, we must become
accountable to something higher than human expediency."
|
Today,
the culture of the machine, the genetic machine, is threatening
to swallow up respect for our spiritual side. We may be entering,
as Omar Bradley put it, "a world of nuclear giants and
ethical infants … [who] have grasped the mystery of
the atom and rejected the Sermon on the Mount".
Obviously, we can’t stop the forward march of human
knowledge. We wouldn’t want to. Curiosity is what leads
us to new frontiers.
Yet each of us must take responsibility to think about where
new technologies - especially in genetics - might take us.
We must hold science accountable. If we don’t get involved
in inventing the future, someone else’s vision of the
future will re-invent us.
Mal Fletcher is the founder and director of Next Wave International,
a Christian mission to contemporary cultures with a special
focus on Europe. This article is an edited excerpt from Mal
Fletcher’s script for the forthcoming EDGES TV film
on ‘The Genetics Industry’. Follow the production
process behind-the-scenes, with Mal’s EDGES Blog. To
watch EDGES online, go to www.edges.tv.
Mal's new book 'The Church of 2020' is available online at
www.nextwaveonline.com.
This article has been reproduced with permission.
|