|
Current Issue Contents | Past Issues | Subscribe | Contact | Terasem Journals Home |
||
|
Volume 1, Issue 2 Other Terasem Journals |
Democratic TranshumanismJames Hughes, Ph.D.page 3 of 8 The Biopolitical Spectrum We also have leftist and feminist critics of biotech who think, because of concerns for equity of access and corporate control and the ways that the Nazis and fascists and other kinds of people have used these technologies, that we need to ban these technologies. Finally, we have the "pro-disability extremists" who are disability rights activists that believe they not only have to fight for the rights of those with disabilities, but must defend disability as an equal way of life by resisting anything that might overcome it. This is quite an extreme position, but one that is increasingly present within the disability rights movement. 2002, A Landmark Year In addition, the President’s Council on Bioethics (PCB) published, “Beyond Therapy”, which is their attack on human enhancement technology. The people who like that report claim it is a nuanced, poetic, academic treatise. In reality, it is a subtle attack on human enhancement technology. In the report, none of the beneficial arguments about why it is good to live an extra fifty years are taken seriously. Emerging Critics of Biotech The Center for Bioethics and Culture in California is a proliferating, metastasizing network of Christian bioethics institutions underwritten by the following institutions: Chuck Colson's Prison Ministries; the Trinity International University and their Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity, which has a list of hundreds of Christian Right bioethics speakers who can attack anything you want them to attack; the Discovery Institute, which is better known for advocating intelligent design, but is also the base for Wesley J. Smith, who argues that America is turning into a "culture of death"; the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington D.C., home of the New Atlantis journal[3] and Eric Cohen, who works closely with the President's Council; the American Enterprise Institute, where Kass, Fukuyama, and PCB member James Wilson are are ensconced; the National Catholic Bioethics Center; and even the Hudson Institute, where Michael Fumento, who is positive on some biotech, yet opposed to other technologies like stem cell research, works closely with the Christian right. Footnotes 2. The Women’s Bioethics Project is the leading nonprofit, nonpartisan public policy think tank dedicated to ensuring that women’s voices, health concerns, and unique life experiences strongly influence ethical issues in health care and biotechnology. Through education, reports, legislative testimony, articles, public conferences and debates, media coverage, and a publicly accessible website we serve as a bridge between scholarship and policymaking; bringing new knowledge to the attention of decision makers and affording scholars, scientists and corporate leaders greater insight into public policy issues. http://www.womensbioethics.org/ March 23, 2006 12:58PM EST (back to top) 3. The New Atlantis is an effort to clarify the nation’s moral and political understanding of all areas of technologyfrom stem cells to hydrogen cells to weapons of mass destruction. We hope to make sense of the larger questions surrounding technology and human nature, and the practical questions of governing and regulating scienceespecially where the moral stakes are high and the political divides are deep. http://www.thenewatlantis.com/about/ March 23, 2006 1:02PM EST (back to top) <previous page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 next page> |
The Terasem Pledge We pledge allegiance to the flag of the collective consciousness of Terasem, and to the principles for which it stands, education, persistently, with diversity, unity, and joyful immortality everywhere.
|
|
TerasemJournal.com Home | Journal of Geoethical Nanotechnology | Journal of Personal Cyberconsciousness Copyright 2006, Terasem Movement. Disclaimer |
||