Quote:
Originally posted by j2k4@21 February 2004 - 20:11
Then along came Adolf Hitler, who gave the subject a bad name for reasons you can explore by reading a history of the Third Reich. At any rate, after World War II, eugenics and talk of anything remotely related to it became taboo.
I think the first line there is actually the most telling of the article, Hitler gave eugenics a bad name which it still hasn't recovered from. However, imo the principles of eugenics are scientifically sound. Humans have removed themselves from evolution and natural selection and without this competition at the genetic level there will inevitably be a weakening of the gene pool. Imo the real problem is deciding what constitutes an undesirable gene sequence, personally I'd probably draw the line at seriously harmful genetic diseases eg cystic fibrosis or hemophilia. (ie persistent medical intervention required).
Quote:
"If you are going to manipulate the genetic composition of an individual you are changing not only that individual, but perhaps a thousand descendants of that individual.
"This is so-called germ line manipulation, and it is very tightly regulated because it could be hideously abused."
"The fundamental issue is a question of justice between generations. Do we control the next generation in that sort of way? Are they are a sort of custom-specified commodity?"