GenEthics: Technological Intervention in Human Reproduction as a Philosophical Problem

GenEthics: Technological Intervention in Human Reproduction as a Philosophical Problem

by KurtBayertz (Author), H.TristramEngelhardtJr (Foreword), SarahL.Kirkby (Translator), Kurt Bayertz (Author), H. Tristram Engelhardt Jr (Foreword), Sarah L. Kirkby (Translator)

Synopsis

This book was first published in 1994. Ever since Plato, human reproduction has been a subject for philosophical speculation. The last two decades are no exception. Quite the contrary: recent technological revolutions within the field of human reproduction has provoked among philosophers reflection and ongoing controversies. In his pioneering book, Kurt Bayertz provides a comprehensive analysis of the philosophical deep structure behind the ongoing controversies. He strikingly relocates some of the central ethical issues concerned with human reproduction and its technological control. The central aim of this book, however, is not to solve the many ethical problems within the field, but to understand the nature of these problems. Such an understanding remains impossible until we realise that technology does not reduce to external power. Control over human reproduction is perhaps the most impressive example of technology as a part of ourselves. We have to face the conclusion that, by changing technology, we change ourselves.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 362
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 16 Feb 1995

ISBN 10: 0521416930
ISBN 13: 9780521416931
Book Overview: An analysis of the ethical controversies surrounding technological intervention in human reproduction.

Media Reviews
This book is important because, like dozens of other ethics of genetics books, it pursues the necessity of questioning the implications of genetic engineering and technological interventions in human reproduction. Monica Arruda, Research in Philosphy and Technology