Green Mtn
location: Observing the Progressive madness with considerably less amusement.
listening to: Grandchildren, the best reason for saving the future.
registered: 2004.04.03
posts: 2617
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...to be directing evolution? In the aftermath, would we remain men?
The most dangerous idea on earth?
By Stephen Cave and Friederike von Tiesenhausen Cave
Published: May 27 2005 12:42 It is easy to see how you could be tempted. It might start
with genetically screening your children for a lower risk of a
hereditary cancer. Or perhaps with a pill that promised to keep
your memory fresh and clear into old age. But what if, while you were having your future children
engineered to be cancer-free, you were offered the chance to make
them musically gifted? Or, if instead of taking a memory-
enhancing pill, you were offered a neural implant that would
instantly make you fluent in all the world’s languages? Or cleverer
by half? Wouldn’t it be difficult to say no? And what if you were
offered a whole new body - one that would never decay or grow
old? A growing number of people believe these will be the fruits
of the revolutions in biotechnology expected this century. And they
consider it every individual’s right to take advantage of these
changes. They think it will soon be within our reach to become
something more than human - healthier, stronger, cleverer. All we
have to do is live long enough to be around when science makes
these advances. If we are, then we may just live forever. This idea, known as transhumanism, is steadily spreading
from a handful of cranks and Star Trek fans into the mainstream
and across the Atlantic. But it is an idea that Francis Fukuyama,
famed for proclaiming the end of history when US-style liberal
democracy triumphed in the cold war, has described as the most
dangerous in the world. In a world at war with terrorism, divided by religious
fundamentalism and haunted by racism, sexism and countless
other prejudices, how is it that transhumanism has earned the
hotly contested title of the most dangerous idea on earth? According to Nick Bostrom’s “The Transhumanist FAQ”,
transhumanists believe “that the human species in its current form
does not represent the end of our development but rather a
comparatively early phase”.
With the help of technology, we will be able to enhance our
capacities far beyond their present state. It will be within our reach
not only to live longer, but to live better. Bostrom, a lecturer at the University of Oxford and the
intellectual spearhead of the transhumanist movement in the UK,
sees it as the natural extension of humanism - the belief that we
can improve our lot through the application of reason. In the past,
humanism has relied on education and democratic institutions to
improve the human condition.
But in the future, Bostrom claims, “we can also use technological
means that will eventually enable us to move beyond what some
would think of as ‘human’”. Transhumanists are utopians. They foresee a world in
which our intellects will be as far above those of our current selves
as we are now above chimpanzees. They dream of being
impervious to disease and eternally youthful, of controlling their
moods, never feeling tired or irritated, and of being able to
experience pleasure, love and serenity beyond anything the human
mind can currently imagine. But dreams of eternal youth are as old as mankind and no
dreamer has yet escaped the grave. Why transhumanists believe
they are different - and why Fukuyama considers them so
dangerous - is because their hopes are based on technologies that
are already being developed. Around the world, there is a growing number of patients
who are being helped through the insertion of electrodes and
microchips into their brains. These “brain-computer interfaces” are
returning sight to the blind and hearing to the deaf. They are even
enabling the completely paralysed to control computers using only
their thoughts. According to computer scientist and writer Ramez Naam, it
is only a matter of time before we can plug these interfaces into
the higher brain functions. We will then be able to use them not
only to heal but to enhance our mental abilities. Naam foresees a
world in which we can do away with paraphernalia such as
keyboards, accessing the enormous power of computers using our
thoughts alone. It is the stuff of comic books: he predicts super-
normal senses, X-ray vision, and sending e-mails just by thinking
about it. We could lie in bed surfing the internet in our heads. In his new book, More Than Human, Naam pins down the
defining belief of transhumanism: that there is no distinction
between treatment and enhancement. Practically and morally, they
are a continuum. In a breathless account, he details the astonishing
advances in medicine over the past 20 years. And he shows how
the same technologies that could cure Parkinson’s or give sight to
the blind could also transform the able-bodied. An ultra-liberal technophile, Naam gushes that “we are the
prospective parents of new and unimaginable creatures”. He is at
his best when indulging his futurological visions, skipping through
some of the trickier moral and social questions. He prophesies a
revolution in human interaction whereby we can send pictures or
even feelings direct into each other’s brains and can read the
thoughts of those too young, stubborn or sulky to communicate.
Extrapolating from technologies that are already being developed,
he argues that there will come a time when we are all linked
together through a single worldwide mind. In the self-consciously sober prose of the Transhumanist
FAQ, a free online publication found on the World Transhumanist
Association’s website (http://transhumanism.org/index.php/WTA/
faq), Bostrom describes a yet more radical dream: that the
integration of brains and computers will one day enable us to leave
the confines of our grey matter altogether.
The ultimate escape from the deterioration that flesh is prone to
would be to have our minds “uploaded” on to new bodies made of
silicone. Our new metal brains would be composed of super
computers that would run our thought processes many times faster
than their fleshy equivalents. We could even make back-ups of our
minds and have ourselves reloaded in the event of emergencies. The FAQ also pins the hopes of transhumanists on areas of
research which are now only in their infancy, such as
nanotechnology.
Theorists believe that one day nanotechnology will enable us to
build complex objects atom by atom. These nanotech “assemblers”
would work like computer printers but in three dimensions. Just as
a machine now will print out whatever we ask it to in two
dimensions, in the future, these assemblers will, like a magic lamp,
instantly create whatever we ask - anything from diamond rings to
three-course dinners. The holy grail of nanotechnology is to use it to help us
live longer and healthier lives. With the ability to move atoms and
molecules around, it will be possible to destroy tumours and
rebuild cell walls and membranes. Ultimately, all diseases can be
seen as the result of certain atoms being in the wrong place and
therefore could be curable by nanotech intervention. Transhumanists also foresee nanotechnology contributing
to a second scientific revolution this century - the development of
superintelligence. We will one day be able to build computers that
can radically outperform the human brain. These superintelligent
systems will not only be able to do sums faster than we can, but
could be wiser, funnier and more creative. As the FAQ puts it, they
“may be the last invention that humans will ever need to make,
since superintelligences could themselves take care of further
scientific and technological development”. But even the most optimistic of trans-humanists recognises
that not all of these breakthroughs will happen tomorrow. So in
order to be around to see this new dawn, many of them are
investing in expensive insurance policies. For a few thousand
pounds, you can ensure that as soon as you are declared dead,
your body will be flown to one of the US’s growing number of
cryonics institutes. There your cadaver will be frozen in liquid
nitrogen and thawed only when medical technology is capable of
undoing the ravages of whichever disease caused your demise. Needless to say, cryonics may not work - currently, the
technology does not exist to reverse the damage caused by
freezing, let alone lethal cancers. But there is no question that it
will improve the odds of a comeback compared with the
conventional alternative: rotting in a grave. As Bostrom puts it,
“cryonics is the second worst thing that can happen to you.” The more laborious approach to sticking around long
enough to become transhuman involves changing to a radically
healthier lifestyle.
In Fantastic Voyage: Live Long Enough to Live Forever, published in
the UK this month, inventor and futurist Ray Kurzweil and
physician Terry Grossman offer a 450-page step-by-step guide to
achieving immortality. Like Bostrom and Naam, Kurzweil and Grossman are
wowed by the potential of new technologies such as genetic
engineering and artificial intelligence, and they sketch the ways in
which they might add to the human life span. But for the ageing
baby boomer generation to which they belong, keeping going long
enough to reap these benefits is a real and pressing concern. The
bulk of their book is therefore dedicated to a detailed compilation
of cutting-edge health advice. Although many of their recommendations - such as to eat
more veg and take more exercise - are the stuff of all our New
Year’s resolutions, others are not for the half-hearted. They
prescribe a regime of “aggressive supplementation” which would
transform any kitchen into a pharmacy. For some vitamins they
advocate between ten and 100 times the current recommended
daily allowance. But despite its extraordinary ambitions, Fantastic
Voyage is serious and extensively researched. Combined with the
boldness of its prescriptions, this puts it in a league above most
other health books on the shelf. There is a long and colourful history of those who have
striven for physical immortality, from the advocates of ingesting
precious metals to the supporters of pickling oneself in wine. The
one thing these advocates have in common is that they are now all
6ft under. To many, transhumanism will seem a continuation of
this age-old and egoistic quest, updated with the modish language
of science fiction. But to transhumanists it is a mission to save the world.
Every week, one million people die on this planet. So instead of
bans and moratoria, transhumanists want to see greater
investment in the kind of research that could make death through
disease and old age entirely avoidable. In Kurzweil and Grossman’s
words, “even minor delays will result in the suffering and death of
millions of people.” For them, this makes it a moral imperative. Fukuyama disagrees. He counsels humility before meddling
with human nature. In last September’s Foreign Policy magazine
article, when he labelled transhumanism the world’s most
dangerous idea, he argued that “the seeming reasonableness of the
project, particularly when considered in increments, is part of its
danger.” We might not all buy the fruits of transhumanism
wholesale, but “it is very possible that we will nibble at
biotechnology’s tempting offerings without realising that they
come at a frightful moral cost.” In his sophisticated and deeply researched book Our
Posthuman Future, Fukuyama expands his case, arguing for
caution on two main grounds.
First, he believes the transhumanist ideal is a threat to equality of
rights. Underlying the idea of universal human rights, he argues, is
the belief in a universal human essence. The aim of transhumanism
is to change that essence. What rights may superintelligent
immortals claim for themselves? “What will happen to political
rights once we are able to, in effect, breed some people with
saddles on their backs, and others with boots and spurs?” Fukuyama’s second argument is based on what he calls the
miraculous complexity of human beings. After hundreds of
thousands of years of evolution, we cannot so easily be unpicked
into good qualities and bad.
“If we weren’t violent and aggressive,” he argues, “we wouldn’t be
able to defend ourselves; if we didn’t have feelings of exclusivity,
we wouldn’t be loyal to those close to us; if we never felt jealousy,
we would also never feel love.” Fukuyama’s answer to the threat of transhumanism is
straightforward: stringent regulation. Despite the current
deregulatory mood in America, his views chime with those of the
anti-abortion right, a core constituency of the Bush administration.
When President George W. Bush first came to power, he set up his
Council on Bioethics to, as he put it, “help people like me
understand what the terms mean and how to come to grips with
how medicine and science interface with the dignity of the issue of
life and the dignity of life, and the notion that life is - you know,
that there is a Creator”. Members of the president’s Council on Bioethics, on which
Fukuyama sits, are widely credited with crafting Bush’s stem cell
policy, which saw a ban on federal funding for research on new
stem cell lines.
This propelled the question of regulating biotechnology to the top
of the political agenda. During the Democratic Party Convention
last year, presidential candidate John Kerry mentioned stem cell
research more often than unemployment. Much of the transhumanist literature has been written in
response to Fukuyama’s book and the edicts of the president’s
Council.
Permeating their work is the sense that technologically they are
advancing steadily, but politically the bio-conservatives are holding
the centre ground. They therefore oscillate between proselytising
the good news that technology is soon to free us from the bonds of
mortality and plaintively arguing for the right to use this
technology as they see fit. In Citizen Cyborg, James Hughes maps what he sees as
these emerging parties in bio-politics and their relationship to the
ideologies and isms of the 20th century. A transhumanist, he
nonetheless believes it is possible to find a middle way between
the libertarians who advocate a technological free-for-all and the
bio-conservatives who want the lot banned. He places himself
within the traditions of both liberal and social democracy, arguing
that “transhumanist technologies can radically improve our quality
of life, and that we have a fundamental right to use them to control
our bodies and minds. But to ensure these benefits we need to
democratically regulate these technologies and make them equally
available in free societies.” Contrary to Fukuyama, Hughes does not believe that the
biotech wonders of the transhumanist era will create new elites. He
argues that they could even strengthen equality by empowering
those who are currently downtrodden: “a lot of social inequality is
built on a biological foundation and enhancement technology
makes it possible to redress that.” But despite his support for some regulation of
transhumanist inventions, Hughes, like Naam, is unrelentingly
technophile. At times this becomes a naive utopianism, such as
when he claims that “technology is about to make possible the
elimination of pain and lives filled with unimaginable pleasure and
contentment.” He rightly argues that in Our Posthuman Future,
Fukuyama “treats every hypothetically negative consequence from
the use of technology with great gravity, while dismissing as hype
all the possible benefits”. Unfortunately, he does not always
recognise when he is mirroring that very mistake. The biotechnology revolution has caused Fukuyama to
revise his contention that we have reached the end of history -
history rolls on, but driven by scientists instead of kings. What all
these writers have in common is the firm belief that the biotech era
will shake up the old political allegiances and create new dividing
lines. On one side will be those who believe such meddling
unnatural and unwise. On the other, those who want to take the
offerings of the biotech revolution and become something more
than human. Won’t you be tempted? OUR POSTHUMAN FUTURE
>by Francis Fukuyama
>Profile Books £8.99, 256 pagesby Francis Fukuyama
>Profile Books £8.99, 256 pagesby Francis Fukuyama
>Profile Books £8.99, 256 pagesProfile Books £8.99, 256 pagesProfile Books £8.99, 256 pages MORE THAN HUMAN
>by Ramez Naam
>Broadway Books £24.95, 288 pagesby Ramez Naam
>Broadway Books £24.95, 288 pagesby Ramez Naam
>Broadway Books £24.95, 288 pagesBroadway Books £24.95, 288 pagesBroadway Books £24.95, 288 pages FANTASTIC VOYAGE
>by Ray Kurzweil and Terry Grossman
>Rodale £17.99, 452 pagesby Ray Kurzweil and Terry Grossman
>Rodale £17.99, 452 pagesby Ray Kurzweil and Terry Grossman
>Rodale £17.99, 452 pagesRodale £17.99, 452 pagesRodale £17.99, 452 pages CITIZEN CYBORG
>by James Hughes
>Westview Press $26.95, 294 pagesby James Hughes
>Westview Press $26.95, 294 pagesby James Hughes
>Westview Press $26.95, 294 pagesWestview Press $26.95, 294 pagesWestview Press $26.95, 294 pages
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
G
Green Mtn
(view)
...to be directing evolution? In the aftermath, would we remain men?
The most dangerous idea on earth?
By Stephen Cave and Friederike von Tiesenhausen Cave
Published: May 27 2005 12:42 It is easy to see how you could be tempted. It might start
with genetically screening your children for a lower risk of a
hereditary cancer. Or perhaps with a pill that promised to keep
your memory fresh and clear into old age. But what if, while you were having your future children
engineered to be cancer-free, you were offered the chance to make
them musically gifted? Or, if instead of taking a memory-
enhancing pill, you were offered a neural implant that would
instantly make you fluent in all the world’s languages? Or cleverer
by half? Wouldn’t it be difficult to say no? And what if you were
offered a whole new body - one that would never decay or grow
old? A growing number of people believe these will be the fruits
of the revolutions in biotechnology expected this century. And they
consider it every individual’s right to take advantage of these
changes. They think it will soon be within our reach to become
something more than human - healthier, stronger, cleverer. All we
have to do is live long enough to be around when science makes
these advances. If we are, then we may just live forever. This idea, known as transhumanism, is steadily spreading
from a handful of cranks and Star Trek fans into the mainstream
and across the Atlantic. But it is an idea that Francis Fukuyama,
famed for proclaiming the end of history when US-style liberal
democracy triumphed in the cold war, has described as the most
dangerous in the world. In a world at war with terrorism, divided by religious
fundamentalism and haunted by racism, sexism and countless
other prejudices, how is it that transhumanism has earned the
hotly contested title of the most dangerous idea on earth? According to Nick Bostrom’s “The Transhumanist FAQ”,
transhumanists believe “that the human species in its current form
does not represent the end of our development but rather a
comparatively early phase”.
With the help of technology, we will be able to enhance our
capacities far beyond their present state. It will be within our reach
not only to live longer, but to live better. Bostrom, a lecturer at the University of Oxford and the
intellectual spearhead of the transhumanist movement in the UK,
sees it as the natural extension of humanism - the belief that we
can improve our lot through the application of reason. In the past,
humanism has relied on education and democratic institutions to
improve the human condition.
But in the future, Bostrom claims, “we can also use technological
means that will eventually enable us to move beyond what some
would think of as ‘human’”. Transhumanists are utopians. They foresee a world in
which our intellects will be as far above those of our current selves
as we are now above chimpanzees. They dream of being
impervious to disease and eternally youthful, of controlling their
moods, never feeling tired or irritated, and of being able to
experience pleasure, love and serenity beyond anything the human
mind can currently imagine. But dreams of eternal youth are as old as mankind and no
dreamer has yet escaped the grave. Why transhumanists believe
they are different - and why Fukuyama considers them so
dangerous - is because their hopes are based on technologies that
are already being developed. Around the world, there is a growing number of patients
who are being helped through the insertion of electrodes and
microchips into their brains. These “brain-computer interfaces” are
returning sight to the blind and hearing to the deaf. They are even
enabling the completely paralysed to control computers using only
their thoughts. According to computer scientist and writer Ramez Naam, it
is only a matter of time before we can plug these interfaces into
the higher brain functions. We will then be able to use them not
only to heal but to enhance our mental abilities. Naam foresees a
world in which we can do away with paraphernalia such as
keyboards, accessing the enormous power of computers using our
thoughts alone. It is the stuff of comic books: he predicts super-
normal senses, X-ray vision, and sending e-mails just by thinking
about it. We could lie in bed surfing the internet in our heads. In his new book, More Than Human, Naam pins down the
defining belief of transhumanism: that there is no distinction
between treatment and enhancement. Practically and morally, they
are a continuum. In a breathless account, he details the astonishing
advances in medicine over the past 20 years. And he shows how
the same technologies that could cure Parkinson’s or give sight to
the blind could also transform the able-bodied. An ultra-liberal technophile, Naam gushes that “we are the
prospective parents of new and unimaginable creatures”. He is at
his best when indulging his futurological visions, skipping through
some of the trickier moral and social questions. He prophesies a
revolution in human interaction whereby we can send pictures or
even feelings direct into each other’s brains and can read the
thoughts of those too young, stubborn or sulky to communicate.
Extrapolating from technologies that are already being developed,
he argues that there will come a time when we are all linked
together through a single worldwide mind. In the self-consciously sober prose of the Transhumanist
FAQ, a free online publication found on the World Transhumanist
Association’s website (http://transhumanism.org/index.php/WTA/
faq), Bostrom describes a yet more radical dream: that the
integration of brains and computers will one day enable us to leave
the confines of our grey matter altogether.
The ultimate escape from the deterioration that flesh is prone to
would be to have our minds “uploaded” on to new bodies made of
silicone. Our new metal brains would be composed of super
computers that would run our thought processes many times faster
than their fleshy equivalents. We could even make back-ups of our
minds and have ourselves reloaded in the event of emergencies. The FAQ also pins the hopes of transhumanists on areas of
research which are now only in their infancy, such as
nanotechnology.
Theorists believe that one day nanotechnology will enable us to
build complex objects atom by atom. These nanotech “assemblers”
would work like computer printers but in three dimensions. Just as
a machine now will print out whatever we ask it to in two
dimensions, in the future, these assemblers will, like a magic lamp,
instantly create whatever we ask - anything from diamond rings to
three-course dinners. The holy grail of nanotechnology is to use it to help us
live longer and healthier lives. With the ability to move atoms and
molecules around, it will be possible to destroy tumours and
rebuild cell walls and membranes. Ultimately, all diseases can be
seen as the result of certain atoms being in the wrong place and
therefore could be curable by nanotech intervention. Transhumanists also foresee nanotechnology contributing
to a second scientific revolution this century - the development of
superintelligence. We will one day be able to build computers that
can radically outperform the human brain. These superintelligent
systems will not only be able to do sums faster than we can, but
could be wiser, funnier and more creative. As the FAQ puts it, they
“may be the last invention that humans will ever need to make,
since superintelligences could themselves take care of further
scientific and technological development”. But even the most optimistic of trans-humanists recognises
that not all of these breakthroughs will happen tomorrow. So in
order to be around to see this new dawn, many of them are
investing in expensive insurance policies. For a few thousand
pounds, you can ensure that as soon as you are declared dead,
your body will be flown to one of the US’s growing number of
cryonics institutes. There your cadaver will be frozen in liquid
nitrogen and thawed only when medical technology is capable of
undoing the ravages of whichever disease caused your demise. Needless to say, cryonics may not work - currently, the
technology does not exist to reverse the damage caused by
freezing, let alone lethal cancers. But there is no question that it
will improve the odds of a comeback compared with the
conventional alternative: rotting in a grave. As Bostrom puts it,
“cryonics is the second worst thing that can happen to you.” The more laborious approach to sticking around long
enough to become transhuman involves changing to a radically
healthier lifestyle.
In Fantastic Voyage: Live Long Enough to Live Forever, published in
the UK this month, inventor and futurist Ray Kurzweil and
physician Terry Grossman offer a 450-page step-by-step guide to
achieving immortality. Like Bostrom and Naam, Kurzweil and Grossman are
wowed by the potential of new technologies such as genetic
engineering and artificial intelligence, and they sketch the ways in
which they might add to the human life span. But for the ageing
baby boomer generation to which they belong, keeping going long
enough to reap these benefits is a real and pressing concern. The
bulk of their book is therefore dedicated to a detailed compilation
of cutting-edge health advice. Although many of their recommendations - such as to eat
more veg and take more exercise - are the stuff of all our New
Year’s resolutions, others are not for the half-hearted. They
prescribe a regime of “aggressive supplementation” which would
transform any kitchen into a pharmacy. For some vitamins they
advocate between ten and 100 times the current recommended
daily allowance. But despite its extraordinary ambitions, Fantastic
Voyage is serious and extensively researched. Combined with the
boldness of its prescriptions, this puts it in a league above most
other health books on the shelf. There is a long and colourful history of those who have
striven for physical immortality, from the advocates of ingesting
precious metals to the supporters of pickling oneself in wine. The
one thing these advocates have in common is that they are now all
6ft under. To many, transhumanism will seem a continuation of
this age-old and egoistic quest, updated with the modish language
of science fiction. But to transhumanists it is a mission to save the world.
Every week, one million people die on this planet. So instead of
bans and moratoria, transhumanists want to see greater
investment in the kind of research that could make death through
disease and old age entirely avoidable. In Kurzweil and Grossman’s
words, “even minor delays will result in the suffering and death of
millions of people.” For them, this makes it a moral imperative. Fukuyama disagrees. He counsels humility before meddling
with human nature. In last September’s Foreign Policy magazine
article, when he labelled transhumanism the world’s most
dangerous idea, he argued that “the seeming reasonableness of the
project, particularly when considered in increments, is part of its
danger.” We might not all buy the fruits of transhumanism
wholesale, but “it is very possible that we will nibble at
biotechnology’s tempting offerings without realising that they
come at a frightful moral cost.” In his sophisticated and deeply researched book Our
Posthuman Future, Fukuyama expands his case, arguing for
caution on two main grounds.
First, he believes the transhumanist ideal is a threat to equality of
rights. Underlying the idea of universal human rights, he argues, is
the belief in a universal human essence. The aim of transhumanism
is to change that essence. What rights may superintelligent
immortals claim for themselves? “What will happen to political
rights once we are able to, in effect, breed some people with
saddles on their backs, and others with boots and spurs?” Fukuyama’s second argument is based on what he calls the
miraculous complexity of human beings. After hundreds of
thousands of years of evolution, we cannot so easily be unpicked
into good qualities and bad.
“If we weren’t violent and aggressive,” he argues, “we wouldn’t be
able to defend ourselves; if we didn’t have feelings of exclusivity,
we wouldn’t be loyal to those close to us; if we never felt jealousy,
we would also never feel love.” Fukuyama’s answer to the threat of transhumanism is
straightforward: stringent regulation. Despite the current
deregulatory mood in America, his views chime with those of the
anti-abortion right, a core constituency of the Bush administration.
When President George W. Bush first came to power, he set up his
Council on Bioethics to, as he put it, “help people like me
understand what the terms mean and how to come to grips with
how medicine and science interface with the dignity of the issue of
life and the dignity of life, and the notion that life is - you know,
that there is a Creator”. Members of the president’s Council on Bioethics, on which
Fukuyama sits, are widely credited with crafting Bush’s stem cell
policy, which saw a ban on federal funding for research on new
stem cell lines.
This propelled the question of regulating biotechnology to the top
of the political agenda. During the Democratic Party Convention
last year, presidential candidate John Kerry mentioned stem cell
research more often than unemployment. Much of the transhumanist literature has been written in
response to Fukuyama’s book and the edicts of the president’s
Council.
Permeating their work is the sense that technologically they are
advancing steadily, but politically the bio-conservatives are holding
the centre ground. They therefore oscillate between proselytising
the good news that technology is soon to free us from the bonds of
mortality and plaintively arguing for the right to use this
technology as they see fit. In Citizen Cyborg, James Hughes maps what he sees as
these emerging parties in bio-politics and their relationship to the
ideologies and isms of the 20th century. A transhumanist, he
nonetheless believes it is possible to find a middle way between
the libertarians who advocate a technological free-for-all and the
bio-conservatives who want the lot banned. He places himself
within the traditions of both liberal and social democracy, arguing
that “transhumanist technologies can radically improve our quality
of life, and that we have a fundamental right to use them to control
our bodies and minds. But to ensure these benefits we need to
democratically regulate these technologies and make them equally
available in free societies.” Contrary to Fukuyama, Hughes does not believe that the
biotech wonders of the transhumanist era will create new elites. He
argues that they could even strengthen equality by empowering
those who are currently downtrodden: “a lot of social inequality is
built on a biological foundation and enhancement technology
makes it possible to redress that.” But despite his support for some regulation of
transhumanist inventions, Hughes, like Naam, is unrelentingly
technophile. At times this becomes a naive utopianism, such as
when he claims that “technology is about to make possible the
elimination of pain and lives filled with unimaginable pleasure and
contentment.” He rightly argues that in Our Posthuman Future,
Fukuyama “treats every hypothetically negative consequence from
the use of technology with great gravity, while dismissing as hype
all the possible benefits”. Unfortunately, he does not always
recognise when he is mirroring that very mistake. The biotechnology revolution has caused Fukuyama to
revise his contention that we have reached the end of history -
history rolls on, but driven by scientists instead of kings. What all
these writers have in common is the firm belief that the biotech era
will shake up the old political allegiances and create new dividing
lines. On one side will be those who believe such meddling
unnatural and unwise. On the other, those who want to take the
offerings of the biotech revolution and become something more
than human. Won’t you be tempted? OUR POSTHUMAN FUTURE
>by Francis Fukuyama
>Profile Books £8.99, 256 pagesby Francis Fukuyama
>Profile Books £8.99, 256 pagesby Francis Fukuyama
>Profile Books £8.99, 256 pagesProfile Books £8.99, 256 pagesProfile Books £8.99, 256 pages MORE THAN HUMAN
>by Ramez Naam
>Broadway Books £24.95, 288 pagesby Ramez Naam
>Broadway Books £24.95, 288 pagesby Ramez Naam
>Broadway Books £24.95, 288 pagesBroadway Books £24.95, 288 pagesBroadway Books £24.95, 288 pages FANTASTIC VOYAGE
>by Ray Kurzweil and Terry Grossman
>Rodale £17.99, 452 pagesby Ray Kurzweil and Terry Grossman
>Rodale £17.99, 452 pagesby Ray Kurzweil and Terry Grossman
>Rodale £17.99, 452 pagesRodale £17.99, 452 pagesRodale £17.99, 452 pages CITIZEN CYBORG
>by James Hughes
>Westview Press $26.95, 294 pagesby James Hughes
>Westview Press $26.95, 294 pagesby James Hughes
>Westview Press $26.95, 294 pagesWestview Press $26.95, 294 pagesWestview Press $26.95, 294 pages
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“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
