HighBridge Audio

Skip to Main Content »

Category Navigation:

Search Site
 

The Human Gene Editing Debate

Audiobook
Nonfiction: Science
Unabridged   5.5 hour(s)
Publication date: 01/31/2022

The Human Gene Editing Debate

Available from major retailers or BUY FROM AMAZON
Digital Download ISBN:9781696603607

Summary

At a critical time in this new era of intervention in the human genome, The Human Gene Editing Debate provides a necessary, comprehensive analysis of the conversation's direction, past, present, and future.

Be the first to review this product
Email to a Friend


Product Description

In 2018 the first genetically modified babies were reportedly born in China, made possible by the invention of CRISPR technology in 2012. This controversial advancement overturned the pre-existing moral consensus, which had held for over fifty years before: while gene editing an adult person was morally acceptable, modifying babies, and thus subsequent generations, crossed a significant moral line. If this line is passed over, scientists will be left without an agreed-upon ethical limit. What do we do now?

John H. Evans here provides a meta-level guide to how these debates move forward and their significance to society. He explains how the bioethical debate has long been characterized as a slippery slope, with consensually ethical use at the top, nightmarish dystopia at the bottom, and specific agreed-upon limits in between, which draw the lines between the ethical and the unethical. Evans frames his analysis around these limits, or barriers. He examines the history of how barriers were placed, then fell, then replaced by new ones, and discusses how these insights inform where the debate may head. He evaluates other proposed barriers relevant to where we are now, projects that most of the barriers suggested by scientists and bioethicists will not hold, and cautiously identifies a few that could serve as the moral boundary for the next generation.

Author Bio

John H. Evans is the Tata Chancellor's Chair in Social Sciences, Professor of Sociology, and codirector of the Institute for Practical Ethics at the University of California, San Diego.