Re: lion, tigers, and mad scientists, oh my!
by
Sawbones
06/25/2007, 10:51 PM #
I'm not certain whether you don't see the part that is creepy about this, or whether you are consciously glossing over it. The (or at least my) problem is not with a bacterium genetically engineered to be a nonsentient replication machine for a specific protein; rather, it is with the quite logical progression that Saletan posits and the unwillingness of the research establishment to consider ruling anything off-limits. If our goal is to create as close a facsimile to human consciousness as possible in a rodent for the purposes of research, it calls into question why we would differentiate between human and animal subjects for research at all. This is not my wish, but rather the logical end of the argument.
It is exceedingly unhelpful to brush this thought off with "but we don't really have that capability yet." The precise problem is the natural human tendency to delay considering the ethical implications of an action until the moment we are actually able to pursue it (or more often, afterward). And at that point, the genie is out of the bottle, and there is no stuffing it back in.
For this reason, it is also unhelpful to say "well, there are people more knowledgeable about the field who are better qualified to answer these questions than I am." Those who hold the steering wheel of this sort of thing are exactly the wrong people to decide its ethical implications. I currently work in an NICU, where I witness some of the worst abominations of modern medicine performed in the name of "saving" infants that would in a more merciful world be allowed to die with comfort and peace. But it is a truism that an intensive-care physician is exactly the worst person to decide whether a radical therapy should be used for a patient who appears to have little or no hope - intensive care attracts those who do, those who tinker, those who believe that by exercising maximum control over as many aspects of a patient's function as possible, they can restore function to what has been broken. This will always be the last person in the room to admit "defeat" and say "we will go no further."
It is a similar kind of person who engages in research science. The hyperspecialization involved in this kind of endeavor makes it increasingly difficult to maintain perspective of that research in its broader context. And when that context involves something as breathtaking as the idea of experimenting on an unwilling possessor of human or semi-human consciousness, anyone with a sense of that broader context automatically begins to lean backward. It is not fear of progress, but rather the natural response of a consciousness with recognition of its own limits, frailties, blind spots and forbidden zones.