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As a disabled person, I admit to being made slightly uncomfortable by the uncritical framing of genetically modified people as "therapy" that all people should want. Where is the line between "gene therapy" to eliminate differences (such as deafness) and eugenics? If we have statistics that taller people have better outcomes in life, should we do gene therapy to make sure everyone is taller than 6'? How much diversity of human experience is too much? Obviously, there are easy cases: this kind of technique to prevent conditions leading to abject suffering, for example. But, knowing and admiring deaf people makes me unsure about the idea of "curing" deafness, for example, as a goal of medicine. |
These are all difficult questions, but it feels like we're going to eventually have to put aside our well founded fears over eugenics and confront these serious questions properly. For instance, many places offer the option to test fetuses/parents for markers of serious genetic disease and offer the option to terminate the pregnancy with the argument that the child would either not be viable or would have a horrible quality of life. On one hand this sounds reasonable, on the other hand it's pretty much a level of eugenics.