Description

Advances in our scientific understanding and technological power in recent decades have dramatically amplified our capacity to intentionally manipulate complex ecological and biological systems. An implication of this is that biological and ecological problems are increasingly understood and approached from an engineering perspective. In environmental contexts, this is exemplified in the pursuits of geoengineering, designer ecosystems, and conservation cloning. In human health contexts, it is exemplified in the development of synthetic biology, bionanotechnology, and human enhancement technologies. Designer Biology: The Ethics of Intensively Engineering Biological and Ecological Systems consists of thirteen chapters (twelve of them original to the collection) that address the ethical issues raised by technological intervention and design across a broad range of biological and ecological systems. Among the technologies addressed are geoengineering, human enhancement, sex selection, genetic modification, and synthetic biology. This collection advances and enriches our understanding of the ethical issues raised by these technologies and identifies general lessons about the ethics of engineering complex biological and ecological systems that can be applied as new technologies and practices emerge. The insights that emerge will be especially valuable to students and scholars of environmental ethics, bioethics, or technology ethics.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Contributor Biographies
Introduction
I. Engineering Humans
Chapter 1: Sex Selection and the Value-Ladenness of the Procreative Liberty Framework
Chapter 2: The Ethics of Embryo Selection
Chapter 3: Assessing Efficacy of “Neuroenhancing” Drugs: Normative Problems in Empirical Controversies
Chapter 4: Engineering for Virtue? Toward Holistic Moral Enhancement
Chapter 5: Radical Enhancement and What' Wrong with It
Chapter 6: Human Engineering and Climate Change
II. Engineering the Environment
Chapter 7: The Human Influence: Moral Responsibility for Novel Ecosystems
Chapter 8: Why Scientists Should Get Out of Nature Conservation
Chapter 9: What it Takes to Justify Geoengineering the Climate
Chapter 10: Remediation vs. Steering: An Act-Description Approach to Approving and Funding Geoengineering Research
III. Engineering Life
Chapter 11: Sensitivity Enhancement: The Ethics of Testing Cognitive Enhancement on Non-Human Research Subjects
Chapter 12: The Capacities, Interests, and Or

Product details

Published Aug 24 2015
Format Paperback
Edition 1st
Extent 304
ISBN 9780739184875
Imprint Lexington Books
Illustrations 8 b/w illustrations;
Dimensions 228 x 154 mm
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Anthology Editor

Ronald L. Sandler

Anthology Editor

John Basl

Contributor

David A. Frank

Contributor

Nicholas Agar

Contributor

S. Matthew Liao

Contributor

Anders Sandberg

Contributor

Rebecca Roache

Contributor

Allen Thompson

Contributor

Stephen Jackson

Contributor

Donald S. Maier

Contributor

Nicole Hassoun

Contributor

Benjamin Hale

Contributor

Sune Holm

Contributor

Scott Simmons

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Bloomsbury Collections

This book is available on Bloomsbury Collections where your library has access.

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