Few voices offering moral guidance in the rapidly
advancing field of biotechnology are as influential as the
President’s Council on Bioethics. Professing to uphold
man’s well-being, the council on April 1 called for regulating
the techniques and research leading to test-tube babies, including
a prohibition on attempts to conceive a child by any means
other than the “union of egg and sperm.” But its
professed goal is belied by the council’s moral viewpoint.
In October 2003 the council outlined some of its views—a
groundwork for policy recommendations—in a little noted
but ominous report, “Beyond Therapy: Biotechnology and
the Pursuit of Happiness.” The report considers the moral
propriety of using biotech not simply to cure diseases, but
to enhance the lives of the healthy, to perfect man’s
body, and prolong his life. Purportedly embracing the power
of biotechnology, the report’s constant demurrals and
misgivings evince a frightening contempt for the value of man’s
life.
Unlike paternalistic bureaucrats, who believe we will harm
ourselves if left free, the concern of the council is not that
we will abuse biotech, but that it will make our bodies fitter,
our memories sharper, our lives longer. Their report portends
draconian regulations of biotechnology in the name of protecting
us not from biotech’s alleged dangers, but from its potential
benefits.
No rational arguments could justify such an absurd viewpoint;
the report offers none. Consider the report’s contrived
misgivings over using biotech to prolong the lives of the healthy.
Amid the wealth of obvious benefits to man of a longer life,
the report conjures up some (supposedly) grave costs. Longer
life, it warns, may diminish the richness of our experience,
diluting our aspirations and the urgency to act. If we each
faced virtually unlimited tomorrows, it asks, would we be moved
to pursue our goals today? Among the things we allegedly may
put off are marriage and childrearing. But longer life is not
immortality (a being guaranteed to live would have no reason
to pursue goals). So, as life expectancy has doubled to about
70 years during the last century, people are, if anything,
more active in all areas of life.
If you are unwilling to accept the bizarre notion that longer
life would be harmful to you, the report wants you to consider
the impact on society. One would think that a future in which
more able people are alive and healthy for longer, applying
themselves to sustaining and improving life, is a future to
be embraced. Imagine if a Thomas Edison lived to an age of
180 with undiminished vigor. But in the report’s jaundiced
view, though individuals may live longer, society may disintegrate.
The old might “think less of preparing their replacements,
and the young could see before them only layers of their elders
blocking their path, and no great reason to hurry in building
families or careers. . .” What we have to dread, apparently,
is that the “succession of generations could be obstructed
by a glut of the able.”
If one recognizes that man’s mind—through production
and trade—is his means of sustaining life—a “glut
of the able” is as much to be feared as a “glut” of
health. That is precisely what the report’s authors evidently
do fear. The report decries the possibility that biotech may
inflate—and satisfy—our desires for physical and
mental improvements. But it is thanks in part to his continually
growing desire for improving his lot in life that man has risen
so far today—from caves to houses; from hunting to scientific
farming; from living at the mercy of uncontrollable pestilence
to conquering diseases through medicine. The latest, perhaps
most potent, tool in this ascent is biotechnology.
The report grasps at straws to have us believe that man’s
attainment of knowledge and mastery over nature will bring
him to a hubristic fall. It solemnly cautions that longer life, “far
from bringing contentment, . . . might make us increasingly
anxious over our health or dominated by the fear of death.”
Implicit in the report is an abhorrence for man’s life
on earth and his happiness. Such a moral viewpoint was once
held by self-flagellating medieval monks as an article of faith;
for the President’s Council—consisting of legal
scholars, scientists, and ethicists—it is little more
than that. Expect the council, therefore, to call for more
regulations not only on conceiving test-tube babies, but on
advances in biotech that would enable man to extend his lifespan
and overcome his physical limitations.
Man urgently needs moral guidance—in biotech as in every
aspect of his life. But he needs a “rational” morality
that, in the words of the philosopher Ayn Rand, teaches man “not
to suffer and die, but to enjoy [himself] and live.” Elan Journo is a writer and editor for the Ayn Rand Institute,
which promotes the philosophy of the author of Fountainhead
and Atlas Shrugged. Send comments and reactions to www.aynrand.org. |