Thus, consider
the arguments of Lee Silver, a molecular biologist at Princeton, who
has cheerfully predicted that parents will one day be able to choose
for their children genes that increase athletic ability, genes that
increase musical talents and ultimately, genes that affect cognitive
abilities. "Why shouldn't parents be able to give their child something
that other children already have?" From this is it not even a small
step towards suggesting, as did Barbara Ehrenreich, "why not make
a few backup copies of the embryo and keep a few in the freezer in case
Junior needs a new kidney or cornea ?"
What is
alarming is how much of this is happening without the knowledge of society
at large, much less with the tacit approval or discussion of the issues
that are involved. Much of the genetic research that is ongoing today
is not veiled in secrecy so much as sanguinely proceeding without reference
to any need to inform society. Even the possibility of the Dolly, the
famous cloned sheep that started the current round of such activity,
became known to the world only several months after her existence. Patrick
Dixon, a scientist who has been prominent in opposing cloning research,
argues that
"when it comes to cloning
of mammals there has been a deliberate conspiracy of silence. At the
very moment of such protestations, advanced experiments of varying kinds
were already taking place in utmost secrecy."
Interesting,
too, is the extent to which such public debate as there has been has
focused less on the darker side of these practices, in particular on
eugenics, and more on other intractable but somehow cosier problems.
Thus, what would happen if a woman cloned her father and bore him as
her son ? What is the status of cloned individuals - are they the same
as others ? What about a possible black market for embryos, and the
possibility of "gene theft" as people choose to clone others
by saving some of their cells ?
Indeed,
the philosophical and psychological issues thrown up by the very real
possibility of human cloning are as mindboggling as they are
fascinating. The analyst Adam Phillips posed the question : is cloning
the death or the apotheosis of individualism ? He suggests that "in one
fell swoop cloning is a cure for sexuality and difference... the art of
self-cloning is an attempt to stop time by killing desire."
But there,
is of course, a darker side. And this darker side is the same as was
revealed at various points throughout the previous century and is now
most evident in the attempts at genetic manipulation of future humans
in other ways as well. Cloning could easily turn into an extreme manifestation
of the eugenic desire to "improve" the human race, or the
megalomaniac desire to reproduce oneself, or the totalitarian desire
to create humans who can be controlled.
It is true,
of course, that the advance of technology constantly forces us to rethink
the norms and ethical principles on which our societies are based. But
equally, as technology advances well beyond the awareness and even the
imagination of ordinary people, its capacity not only for beneficial
progress but also for massive social disruption and even pure evil,
cannot be underestimated.