![]() ![]() We are already living in an age of enhancement. We are no longer living in a time when we can say we either want to enhance or we don’t. Many thinkers from different disciplines and faith traditions worry that radical changes will lead to people who are no longer either physically or psychologically human. There also is significant philosophical, ethical and religious opposition to transhumanism. For instance, researchers still do not fully comprehend how people age or fully understand the source of human consciousness. Questions remain about the feasibility of radically changing human physiology, in part because scientists do not yet completely understand our bodies and minds. The science that underpins transhumanist hopes is impressive, but there is no guarantee that researchers will create the means to make super-smart or super-strong people. Instead of leaving a person’s physical well-being to the vagaries of nature, supporters of these technologies contend, science will allow us to take control of our species’ development, making ourselves and future generations stronger, smarter, healthier and happier. But transhumanists predict that a convergence of new technologies will soon allow people to control and fundamentally change their bodies and minds. Up to this point, they say, humans have largely worked to control and shape their exterior environments because they were powerless to do more. To those who support human enhancement, many of whom call themselves transhumanists, technological breakthroughs like these are springboards not only to healing people but to changing and improving humanity. The new gene-splicing technique “CRISPR” greatly improves scientists’ ability to accurately and efficiently “edit” the human genome. One of the most important developments in recent years involves a new gene-splicing technique called “clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats.” Known by its acronym, CRISPR, this new method greatly improves scientists’ ability to accurately and efficiently “edit” the human genome, in both embryos and adults. Still others have created synthetic blood substitutes, which could soon be used in human patients. Other scientists successfully linked a paralyzed man’s brain to a computer chip, which helped restore partial movement of previously non-responsive limbs. In the last few years, for instance, researchers have implanted artificial retinas to give blind patients partial sight. It seems that each week or so, the headlines herald a new medical or scientific breakthrough. Indeed, science is already making rapid progress in new restorative and therapeutic technologies that could, in theory, have implications for human enhancement. ![]() This enhancement revolution, if and when it comes, may well be prompted by ongoing efforts to aid people with disabilities and heal the sick. Others speak of “post-humanity,” and predict that dramatic advances in genetic engineering and machine technology may ultimately allow people to become conscious machines – not recognizably human, at least on the outside. Some talk about what might be called “humanity plus” – people who are still recognizably human, but much smarter, stronger and healthier. In the next two or three decades, people may have the option to change themselves and their children in ways that, up to now, have existed largely in the minds of science fiction writers and creators of comic book superheroes.īoth advocates for and opponents of human enhancement spin a number of possible scenarios. “We’re fast approaching the moment when humans and machines merge,” Time magazine declared in its 2011 issue.īut thanks to recent scientific developments in areas such as biotechnology, information technology and nanotechnology, humanity may be on the cusp of an enhancement revolution. Even when these interventions have tried to improve on nature – say with anabolic steroids to stimulate muscle growth or drugs such as Ritalin to sharpen focus – the results have tended to be relatively modest and incremental. Up to this point in history, however, most biomedical interventions, whether successful or not, have attempted to restore something perceived to be deficient, such as vision, hearing or mobility. People have been trying to enhance their physical and mental capabilities for thousands of years, sometimes successfully – and sometimes with inconclusive, comic and even tragic results. Human enhancement is at least as old as human civilization. ![]()
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