From: Billy Brown (ewbrownv@mindspring.com)
Date: Thu Aug 12 1999 - 15:37:29 MDT
hal@finney.org [SMTP:hal@finney.org] wrote:
> Billy Brown, <ewbrownv@mindspring.com>, writes:
> > So, in other words, this is such a sticky problem that we should have
> > government make all the decisions? Somehow, that seems less than ideal
to
> > me.
>
> Can't we discuss these issues without this knee jerk libertarian
response?
>
> Robert didn't say anything about government. He posed an ethical
question.
> Do we have the right to make genetic alterations to our children, given
> that they cannot consent to the procedure?
>
> This is an interesting and valid question to discuss without bringing
> in the issue of government enforcement.
Yes, it is. However, the basic question of the original post (IMHO) was
"When should parents be allowed to make this decision, and when should they
be prevented from doing so?" Since the only effective means of preventing
parents from making their own decisions is government action, I think my
response is perfectly reasonable. But perhaps I should back up a few
steps.
Any discussion of this issue needs to be guided by two important
realizations:
1) We are not going to achieve a broad consensus issue anytime soon. The
ideas held by different groups of people about what constitutes treatment
vs enhancement, benificial changes vs harmfull ones, and the proper scope
of parental vs social responsibility, are simply too diverse. The
diversity of opinion will only grow as the issue moves into the mainstream
over the coming years.
2) These issue are sufficiently important that only the most extreme social
pressures would deter individuals from acting according to their own
conscience. Since broad consensus is very unlikely, there will be no
strong social pressures - just a complex, many-sided debate.
3) These issues are sufficiently complex that any hard-and-fast rule about
what actions are permissible is likely to displease everyone involved.
They are also sufficiently important that anyone who has the authority to
make rules is likely to feel a moral obligation to do so. That means that
this is an extremely slippery slope - it will be very difficult to set up
any kind of regulation at all without ending up with an Office of
Reproductive Regulation that produces endless reams of complex law.
With these limitations in mind, I see only two options about the location
of decision-making authority that can be expected to be at all stable.
These are:
1) Give the government complete control over all decisions. They get to
decide what modifications will and will not be allowed, what circumstances
they will be allowed under, and who will have access to them.
2) Give parents broad discretion to make their own ethical decisions.
Forbid only those modifications that would run afoul of existing laws
regarding slavery, murder, bodily injury, etc.
Do you see another option?
Billy Brown, MCSE+I
ewbrownv@mindspring.com
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