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| Predicting the IQ of Future Peopleby Pete Shanks, Biopolitical TimesMay 15th, 2013The resignation of Jason Richwine from the Heritage Foundation raised the profile of racist views about IQ. Expect new publicity soon for genetic claims about intelligence. |
| Meet the New Eugenics, Same as the Old Eugenicsby Gina Maranto, Biopolitical Times guest contributor, Biopolitical TimesMarch 4th, 2013According to a new wave of eugenic advocacy, “we” have a “moral obligation” to enhance future generations.
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| Of Monsters and Menby George Estreich, Biopolitical Times guest contributor, Biopolitical TimesNovember 29th, 2012The Amazing Spider-Man’s focus on genetic modification is more than incidental.
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| Clones and Cloud Atlasby Pete Shanks, Biopolitical TimesNovember 13th, 2012Of the many characters in Cloud Atlas that explore what it means to be human, the most eloquent is a genetically engineered clone. |
| Concern Over 'Souped Up' Human Raceby Michelle Roberts, BBC NewsNovember 8th, 2012Four professional bodies in the UK warn that there is an "immediate need" for debate around the potential harms of human enhancement technologies. |
| Advocating Human Germline Interventionsby Pete Shanks, Biopolitical TimesOctober 28th, 2012Scientists in Oregon have published a paper that explicitly challenges the legal and procedural system that forbids genetic experiments on future generations, but most reports miss the full implications of the announcement. |
| Bill McKibben on Real Time With Bill Maherby Osagie K. Obasogie, Biopolitical TimesOctober 18th, 2012Bill McKibben discusses the radical implications of climate change and the troubling proposal made by some to "alter [human] behavior and physiology" to deal with these changes. |
| Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells and Germline Engineeringby Pete Shanks, Biopolitical TimesOctober 16th, 2012Japanese researchers have created mice by using sperm and eggs grown from induced pluripotent stem cells, a development that could bring human germline engineering much closer. |
| Ethics Schmethics Says Ethicistby Pete Shanks, Biopolitical TimesJuly 19th, 2012The approach of the Olympics sparks the usual flood of pro-enhancement articles, notably an interview with Julian Savulescu. |
| Discussing Transhumanism on Al-Jazeeraby Pete Shanks, Biopolitical TimesApril 5th, 2012Al Jazeera, the global TV and multimedia news organization, recently featured a discussion of transhumanism. |
| Larry King: I Want To Be FrozenNo Topic Off Limits At 'Dinner With The Kings'
by Katie McLaughlin, CNNDecember 2nd, 2011On a Larry King Special, "Dinner with the Kings," Larry King announced his plans to be frozen when he dies.
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| Mirror, Mirror on the Wall, Who’s the Healthiest One of All?by Emily Beitiks, Biopolitical TimesNovember 16th, 2011High-tech "consumer health" gadgets - from a bathroom mirror that measures your health stats to an iPhone app for diagnosing your symptoms - are ineffective techno-fixes for wider social problems. |
| Living to 100 and Beyondby Sonia Arrison, The Wall Street JournalAugust 27th, 2011Scientists are on the brink of radically expanding the span of a healthy life. Author Sonia Arrison on the latest advances—and what they mean for human existence.
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| How to Hack a Genomeby Pete Shanks, Biopolitical TimesJuly 20th, 2011Synthetic biology seems to have taken a major step forward, with the publication of a technique for making multiple alterations to a living genome. |
| Dreams of the Weekby Pete Shanks, Biopolitical TimesMay 18th, 2011Several recent announcements and studies appear to presage renewed interest in manipulating the biology that is thought to control longevity and especially our children's happiness and intelligence. |
| Isn't It Time to Focus on the Real Future?by Jillian Theil and Pete Shanks, Biopolitical TimesFebruary 16th, 2011Time magazine features a glowing story about Ray Kurzweil, of Singularity fame. But does the hoopla around Kurzweil's tomorrow distract from the important problems of today? |
| No More Guatemalasby Marcy Darnovsky, Biopolitical TimesOctober 21st, 2010What lessons should be drawn from the recent revelation of horrific abuses of Guatemalans by medical experimenters during the 1940s? |
| The Genetic Gist of JIMby Jillian Theil, Biopolitical TimesOctober 7th, 2010A new independent film with a timeless message. |
| A Singular Kind of Eugenicsby Pete Shanks, Biopolitical TimesJune 16th, 2010Modern techno-utopianism, discussed in a recent feature on Singularity University, has worryingly eugenic overtones. |
| Merely Human? That's So Yesterdayby Ashlee Vance, New York TimesJune 11th, 2010Some of Silicon Valley’s smartest and wealthiest people believe that technology may be the only way to solve the world’s ills, while also allowing people to seize control of the evolutionary process. |
| Return of the GenRich?by Pete Shanks, Biopolitical TimesOctober 29th, 2009There has been a brief flurry of discussion about future separate species of humans. |
| Strange New World[Book Review]by Jeanette Winterson, The New York TimesSeptember 20th, 2009Margaret Atwood's new novel, "The Year of the Flood," takes place in the same bioengineered world as her 2003 work of speculative fiction, "Oryx and Crake." |
| Michael Sandel on genetics, morality, and a new politics of the common goodby Marcy Darnovsky, Biopolitical TimesSeptember 11th, 2009"It is tempting to think that bioengineering our children and ourselves for success in a competitive society is an exercise of freedom. But changing our nature to fit the world, rather than the other way around, is actually the deepest form of disempowerment." |
| Transhumanists as Nihilists, Continuedby Jesse Reynolds, Biopolitical TimesSeptember 2nd, 2009Why do transhumanists advocate for technologies and policies that even they apparently admit will likely lead to such a dark future? |
| Capitalism 1, Transhumanism 0by Pete Shanks, Biopolitical TimesAugust 31st, 2009Singularity University's first students have revealed the projects for which they are seeking capital, and they backed away from transhumanist or singularitarian ideas. |
| Libertarians Diss Democracyby Marcy Darnovsky, Biopolitical TimesMay 14th, 2009Transhumanists put their disdain for democracy in writing. |
| A crash course in emerging technologiesby David Gelles, Financial TimesApril 24th, 2009Through a combination of techno-optimism, wide-eyed idealism and belief in the perfectibility of human beings, Singularity University is an institution meant to legitimize extreme thinking. |
| Nature Makes Newsby Pete Shanks, Biopolitical TimesDecember 11th, 2008Nature has published a Commentary that advocates the use of "cognitive-enhancing drugs." |
| Appleyard on H+by Pete Shanks, Biopolitical TimesOctober 22nd, 2008Brian Appleyard weighs in on "risible" transhumanists. |
| A Literal Reductionist?by Pete Shanks, Biopolitical TimesJuly 31st, 2008Michael Rae believes calorie restriction will increase his lifespan. |
| Putting Makeup on a Pigby Jesse Reynolds, Biopolitical TimesJuly 9th, 2008It seems that advocates of using emerging technologies to create a new type of human have realized that "transhuman" doesn't go over well. |
| The Modified Man[Quotes CGS's Richard Hayes]by Carl T. Hall, CaliforniaJuly 3rd, 2008Genetically souped-up athletes? Not a good idea, for reasons that go the heart of sports and beyond, says CGS's Richard Hayes. |
| Designing Babies [MP3]by Marcy Darnovsky, Ronald Green, and Neal Conan, Talk of the NationApril 15th, 2008Marcy Darnovsky discusses genetic selection and modification with libertarian bioethicist Ronald Green on National Public Radio's Talk of the Nation. |
| Genetically Modified Humans? No Thanks.by Richard Hayes, Washington PostApril 15th, 2008New human genetic technologies have real potential to help prevent or cure many terrible diseases. But if misapplied, they would exacerbate existing inequalities and reinforce existing modes of discrimination. If more widely abused, they could undermine the foundations of civil and human rights. In the worst case, they could undermine our experience of being part of a single human community with a common human future. |
| Are We Headed for a Sci-Fi Dystopia?
by Marcy Darnovsky, AlterNetMarch 22nd, 2008Those in Gen X and Gen Y who ponder the prospect of a repro-genetic dystopia think of Gattaca. Last week's release of a collector's edition of the 1997 film unavoidably prompts us to measure ourselves against its "not-too-distant future" of genetic castes and DNA-based discrimination. Has our world become more like Gattaca than it was a decade ago? |
| Genomes of the Rich and Famousby Jesse Reynolds, Biopolitical TimesMarch 5th, 2008Genomics’ growing convergence with information technology may lead to the genetic "exploitation" of society's elite. |
| Making Waves, Practicing Wisdomby Marcy Darnovsky, Biopolitical TimesJanuary 21st, 2008A new memoir by Charlie Halpern includes an eloquent call for bringing "wisdom of a high order" to the challenges of the new human biotechnologies. |
| Transhumanists as Nihilistsby Jesse Reynolds, Biopolitical TimesJanuary 16th, 2008The World Transhumanist Association's survey of its members surprised me with what amounts to, at the very least, an acknowledgment of the limitations of the organization's philosophy. |
| Watson as wake-up call: When genetics endorses a new eugenicsby Marcy Darnovsky, Biopolitical TimesOctober 22nd, 2007Though neither media nor blogosphere have noted it so far, Watson and a small but disturbing number of other prominent figures are actively promoting a renewed program of eugenics - this time using 21st-century reproductive and genetic technologies. |
| Nobel Notions and the Uses of Geneticsby Marcy Darnovsky, AlternetOctober 19th, 2007It's Nobel Prize season, and Nobel scientists are very much in the news. James Watson is currently embroiled in controversy after making a series of blatantly racist remarks. But related views espoused by one of this year's laureates have gone unnoticed. |
| Enhancing the speciesby Anjana Ahuja, The Times (UK)October 10th, 2007Philosopher John Harris argues that we have a moral and ethical duty to improve the human race by biologically enhancing our children. |
| And Behind This Door...by Marcy Darnovsky, Biopolitical TimesAugust 27th, 2007"Artificial life likely in 3 to 10 years," is the title of a recent widely published Associated Press article, and the message of the scientists interviewed therein. |
| Is He for Real? Are You?by Pete Shanks, Biopolitical TimesAugust 20th, 2007Nick Bostrom's specialty is coming up with ludicrous premises and then explicating the inferences that can logically be derived from them in pedantic detail. |
| Japan scientists devise "womb" for IVF eggsby Tan Ee Lyn, ReutersJuly 27th, 2007Scientists in Japan have created a "womb" for incubating artificially fertilised eggs in their earliest days, helping them grow nearly as fast as they would in the uterus, |
| Beam Me Up!by Jesse Reynolds, Biopolitical TimesJuly 26th, 2007Today, actor William Shatner gives a keynote presentation at the annual meeting of the World Transhumanist Association. Will he remind his technophilic audience that, in the Star Trek canon, the development of human genetic engineering on Earth led to a globally-devastating conflict, the Eugenics Wars?
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| Technology Tail Wags the Ethical Dogby Jesse Reynolds, Biopolitical TimesMay 7th, 2007Are the technophiles and utilitarians becoming more brazen in their assertion that "There is no alternative?" |
| Our Biopolitical Future: Four Scenarios [PDF]World WatchFebruary 28th, 2007CGS Executive Director Richard Hayes's essay is the cover story of the March/April issue of World Watch magazine. The four scenarios, which cover the years between 2007 and 2021, are Libertarian Transhumanism Triumphs, One Family, One Future, A Techno-Eugenic Arms Race, and For the Common Good.
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| Not So Strange Bedfellowsby Osagie K. Obasogie, Biopolitical TimesJanuary 8th, 2007Would Milton Friedman be a transhumanist? The Economist - the magazine of record for free marketeers - suggests that he might. |
| Book reviews: Stem cells, enhancement and cloningGenetic CrossroadsAugust 4th, 2006Genetic Crossroads reviews Stem Cell Wars (Eve Herold), Challenging Nature: The Clash of Science and Spirituality at the New Frontiers of Life (Lee M. Silver), and After Dolly: The Uses and Misuses of Human Cloning (Ian Wilmut and Roger Highfield) |
| Transhumanism: Yearning to transcend biologyby Cathy Young, Boston GlobeJuly 10th, 2006"With everything else that's happening in the world today, debates about whether humanity should embrace as yet nonexistent technologies that could enhance our physical and intellectual abilities and someday make us "more than human" may seem frivolous." |
| Transhumanists Declare the “Right” to be Super-HumanGenetic CrossroadsJune 29th, 2006A group that advocates using genetic and other technologies to transform human beings into “posthumans” with new and expanded abilities held a conference May 26-28 titled “Human Enhancement Technologies and Human Rights.” The event was organized by the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies at Stanford Law School. |
| Among the TranshumanistsCyborgs, self-mutilators, and the future of our raceby William Saletan, SlateJune 4th, 2006William Saletan reports on the Transhumanist conference, "Human Enhancement Technologies," at Stanford University. |
| Sports and gene "doping"Genetic CrossroadsSeptember 29th, 2005On the Kojo Nnamdi Show on WAMU public radio in Washington, D.C., the Center's Osagie Obasogie joined former all-star baseball player Jose Canseco, World Anti-Doping Agency Chair Richard Pound, and other sports doping experts to talk about genetic enhancement of athletes and its implications for the sports industry and society. |
| Discussing the ethics of altering human genesby Charles Burress, San Francisco ChronicleSeptember 30th, 2004At an event sponsored by the UC Berkeley Knight Program in Science and Environmental Journalism, CGS's Marcy Darnovsky and author Bill McKibben spoke to an overflow crowd about the challenges of the new human genetic technologies and California's Prop 71. |
| Posthuman Enough?by Richard B. Norgaard, BioScienceMarch 30th, 2004Will we say "enough" and set up the controls necessary to prevent the transformation of a portion of the human population into superpeople? |
| James Watson Wants to Build a Better Humanby Ralph Brave, AlterNet.orgMay 28th, 2003Did you have a nice DNA Day? And how was your Human Genome Month?
If you missed those Congressionally-designated celebrations last month due to minor distractions, like a war or being laid off from your job, don't worry: The media missed the real story anyway. |
| Too Clever Too Fast Too Happyby Bill McKibben, The GuardianMay 3rd, 2003But what if, instead of crudely cheating with hypodermics, we began literally to programme children before they were born to become great athletes?... And as we move into the new world of genetic engineering, we won't simply lose races, we'll lose racing : we'll lose the possibility of the test, the challenge, the celebration that athletics represents. |
| Designer Genesby Bill McKibben, OrionApril 30th, 2003Once you accept the idea that our bodies are essentially plastic, and that it's okay to manipulate that plastic, there's no reason to think that consumers would balk because "genes" were involved instead of, say, "toxins." Especially since genetic engineering would not promote your own vanity, but instead be sold as a boon to your child. The vision of genetic engineers is to do to humans what we have already done to salmon and wheat, pine trees and tomatoes. |
| The Weapons of Mass CreationAre we ready for genetically enhanced 'designer people'? If so, who will make the titanic decisions involved?by Caroline S. Wagner, Los Angleles TimesFebruary 13th, 2003 |
| Humanity 2.0by Carl Elliott, Wilson QuarterlyNovember 30th, 2002 |
| The Genome as CommonsThrough all the trials and tribulations of human history what binds us in the end is our common humanityby Tom Athanasiou and Marcy Darnovsky, WorldWatchJuly 1st, 2002Perhaps we must put the human genome itself on this endangered commons list, and note that if this genetic commons too is lost to partition and privatization, if it too becomes the privilege of the affluent, then none of us on either side of the divide can be sure of retaining the "humanity" we like to think we've achieved. |
| SuperhumansLike it or not, in a few short years we'll have the power to control our own evolutionby Robert Taylor, New ScientistOctober 1st, 1998 |
| Designer Peopleby Sally Deneen, E MagazineThe Human Genetic Blueprint Has Been Drafted, Offering Both Perils and Opportunities for the Environment. The Big Question: Are We Changing the Nature of Nature? |
| Engineering the Human Germline Participants Following is a selection of notable statements made by participants at the 1998 Symposium, Engineering the Human Germline. All of these statements were taken from the Symposium Report (http://www.ess.ucla.edu/huge) or from Chapter II, "A Panel Discussion" in Engineering the Human Germline: An Exploration of the Science and Ethics of Altering the Genes We Pass to Our Children by Gregory Stock and John Campbell, eds., (New York: Oxford University Press, 2000). |
| Engineering the Human GermlineA one-day public symposium held on March 20, 1998 at the University of California at Los Angeles marked the effective beginning of the active campaign to promote the development and use of inheritable germline modification (IGM). The event, entitled Engineering the Human Germline, was organized by UCLA professors Gregory Stock and John Campbell. |
| Libertarian AdvocacyThe issues of cloning and techno-eugenics have motivated libertarian organizations and activists. |
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