From Deseret News archives:

Shall we enhance?

Transhumanism says we're a species in flux

Published: Friday, Jan. 6, 2006 11:43 p.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Stupidity and sadness, cancer and bad golf scores. In the world according to transhumanism, these and other human frailties will eventually go the way of scurvy. Also on the horizon: immortality.

The possibilities are either tantalizing or terrifying, depending on your point of view. Transhumanists embrace a future in which everyone has the right to live a life beyond current biological limitations. Their detractors argue that all these radical enhancements will make us less human.

That depends on what you mean by "human," say transhumanists, whose very name suggests a species in flux.

As the World Transhumanist Association notes on its Web site, transhumanism is based on the premise that "the human species in its current form does not represent the end of our development but rather a comparatively early phase." Eventually, say transhumanists, we may indeed become "posthuman" — such an amalgamation of nanotechnology and neuropharmaceuticals, so changed by our interface with microchips and nanorobots, so much smarter, happier and healthier, that we hardly would be recognizable to early 21st century eyes.

Story continues below
It's science fiction based on science fact, a trajectory that begins with emerging technologies like cyberkinetic chips and gene therapy, says James Hughes, president of the World Transhumanist Association and author of "Citizen Cyborg." Actually, says Hughes, that trajectory began as soon as our Paleolithic ancestors started taking care of everyone who was toothless, a point at which we first transcended natural selection, he says. We have relied on technologies of one sort or another for millennia — from eye glasses to antibiotics — to continually make ourselves better than we naturally are.

But where do we draw the line? Or should we draw a line at all?

How smart should we be allowed to be? How tall? How happy? If we can make depressed people less depressed, should we make happy people more happy? If we can make our children healthier and smarter, if we can eliminate much of the suffering in the world through technology, do we have a moral responsibility to do so? Or do we have a moral responsibility to speak out against it?

These questions and hundreds of others will face humanity in the decades to come. There will likely come a time in the not-so-distant future when we will look back on simpler issues — steroid use by baseball players, for example — with a certain nostalgia for simpler times.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Related content
previousnext

Latest comments

Hall reprimanded by MWC

You dont like us and tell us everyday how much you hate our school. Of all...

did not win the game Harvey Unga did and without Mr Unga BYU would not have...

Hall reprimanded by MWC

in two senses of the word. 1)Great game. Both defenses played terrific...

Max Hall issues apology

At least someone has class. I hope your wife is OK. BYU fans = hypocrites

Hall reprimanded by MWC

I was not a big fan of Max before the game, nor during the game, but I AM...

Letters: Therapy for Hall

@I don't know where he got this: "I don't know where Max Hall is coming...

Some 40 + years ago A friend and I attended at BYU/Utah game in SLC. Many...

Letters: Cell phone danger

And these cell phone laws will need to be enforced by our police officers who...

Militia movement resurfaces in U.S.

Self defense doesn't encourage violence, it prevents it. Training to face the...

Hall reprimanded by MWC

This make you crybabies feel better? Guess what? THE SCOREBOARD IS THE...

Advertisements