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Greely, Henry T --- "Regulating Human Biological Enhancements: Questionable Justifications and International Complications" [2005] UTSLawRw 4; (2005) 7 University of Technology Sydney Law Review 87


Regulating Human Biological Enhancements:

Questionable Justifications and International Complications

Henry T. Greely

Enhance: 3. To make greater, as in value or desirability. Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary (2d. ed. 1934).

From the definition, it seems that to enhance something would be a good thing. But when humanity is at issue, enhancement is controversial even though human beings historically have struggled to enhance themselves. Humans used stone tools, fire, clothing, and domesticated plants and animals for enhanced safety, health, nourishment, and power—making ourselves “greater”. The difference today is our growing knowledge of biology.

Human power over living things is not new. Our agricultural ancestors effectively created all of our crops and our domestic animals; selecting, culling, and crossing individual plants to create wheat, corn, and rice and to turn wolves into everything from great danes to chihuahuas. The biological revolution of the last 50 years has brought a level of control that, although not unlimited, is certainly unprecedented. Science can now form creatures by mixing genes, cells, and tissues not just among near relatives, but across biological orders, classes, and kingdoms. We can make genetically identical copies of many mammals. And, if we chose, we could begin a project that could be described as b[1]uilding biological super-humans. The controversy today centers on the use of new, technical methods to change the structure or function of the human body, typically through drugs or drug-like substances or through surgical interventions.

Some view the prospect of “enhancing” humanity as liberating, and exciting;[2] for others it seems to be disturbing, even frightening. The vast literature on enhancement is rapidly increasing, exploring many aspects of a wide variety of enhancements.[3] This article tries to add two things to that literature: an analysis of whether human biological enhancement is meaningfully different from other forms of human enhancement and a discussion of some of the implications of international realities for the regulation of enhancement.

The article begins with examples of controversial human biological enhancements and a review of the arguments against such enhancements. Next, it intensively examines whether human biological enhancements are meaningfully different from other kinds of human enhancement. Then it analyzes ways in which human cultural diversity and splintered political sovereignty cut against effective curbs on such enhancements. The article concludes that human biological enhancements are not inherently different from other forms of enhancing technologies and regulation of enhancement technologies remains a challenge.

I. Human Biological Enhancements: Examples and Objections

The story of humanity is the history of enhancement. Stone tools, control of fire, and clothing all enhanced the success of hunter gatherers. Agriculture enhanced food supply and population size and made possible the specialization of labor. Writing systems enhanced our ability to communicate, among people and across time, and strengthened our memories; printing reduced the costs of mass distribution of information. Metallurgy and engineering, electricity and computers have all increased what humans can do and what we can be. These enhancements came with their social costs, including toil, war, and stress. The legend of the Golden Age is a legend of life before the enhancements called civilization. Although the legend is deeply attractive, it is unimaginable that anyone would seriously consider a return to the hunter gatherer existence of our ancestors, even with their enhancing stone, wood, and bone tools.

Controversy today focuses on enhancements that seem different because they increase our abilities by enhancing our biological selves through new technical inventions. This article will discuss five examples—cosmetic surgery, personality improvement, sports performance enhancing drugs, genetic enhancements, and cognitive enhancements—but only after making one very important distinction.

A. Enhancement Uses versus Medical Uses

Technologies that are controversial as enhancements are largely viewed as mundane when used “medically”.[4] These medical uses either restore normal function to someone who has lost it through injury or disease or confer normal function on someone who, generally because of birth defects, never had it. Precisely the same surgical technique is encouraged, covered by public and private health plans, when it restores a nose damaged in an accident but is somewhat controversial; and not covered by health plans when it improves the aesthetics of a nose to be within the normal range of attractiveness. When cosmetic surgery is performed to treat psychological disorders, such as shyness or low self esteem, it is unclear as to whether it is a medical treatment or an enhancement. (Vaccinations may also be viewed as intermediate between medical and enhancing technology; they are not usually used to treat disease but to prevent it by enhancing the subject’s immune system.)

The use of otherwise enhancing technologies to help someone with a disease or defect is rarely controversial because of its “enhancing” characteristics; the focus is on its restoration of normal function. There are, however, at least two examples of disputes about those kinds of uses. One involves professional sports, when the Professional Golf Association (PGA) denied Casey Martin the use of a golf cart during tournaments, because it was an “enhancing technology”, even though he had a circulatory disorder that made walking extremely painful.[5] The United States Supreme Court held that the PGA’s policy violated the Federal Americans with Disabilities Act. As the Court noted, there was no evidence that the combination of his disability and the golf cart gave him an advantage over a golfer with healthy legs. The second concerns a technology called a cochlear implant that can alleviate some forms of deafness. Some members of the deaf community initially opposed the use of cochlear implants in deaf children because the implants had the potential greatly to reduce, or even eliminate deafness, and thus to eradicate deaf culture.[6]

This distinction between applauded medical uses and controversial enhancement uses of biological technologies is important for two reasons: First, it demonstrates that it is the purpose for which the technology is used, not the technology itself, which makes some enhancements controversial. Second, it explains the increasing flow of human biological enhancements. These technologies are almost always sought and developed to cure disease or disability. Health care systems provide large, well organized, and lucrative markets for expensive new technologies. The medical, restorative powers of plastic surgery, anabolic steroids, human growth hormone, Ritalin, and cochlear implants also bear extensive enhancement side effects. To borrow a term from arms control, these are “dual use” technologies, with substantial public, political, and financial support for their development for medical uses. The enhancing uses are usually an unintended, but controversial, consequence.

B. Controversial Human Biological Enhancements

Some of the discussion that follows is methodologically suspect: the discussion regarding which enhancements are controversial and why people find them controversial is based on subjective impressions. This personal introspection is surely not strong evidence of a culture’s beliefs, but, without the time or funds to commission massive surveys or multiple focus groups, I can hope that it offers a perspective that may provoke interest in this type of analysis. Furthermore, even if there is some validity in that analysis, it is only an analysis of the culture in which I live, a mainstream version of the culture of the United States.

Egyptian burials provide evidence that people enhanced their attractiveness from at least the dawn of civilization, while cosmetic surgery has existed since the early 20th century.[7] Cosmetic surgery does not have a stigma when used to repair the ravages of injury or disease or birth defects. When used for these ends, cosmetic surgery is both socially approved and generally covered in health care costs. When the same techniques are used to reshape roughly normal noses, breasts or penises, or to remove fat, the surgeries become controversial and are not generally covered by health insurance. On the other hand, enhancing one’s appearance through diet and exercise is normally approved; as, to a lesser extent, is the use of cosmetics, hair dye, skin creams, and other beauty aids.

The rise of neuropharmacology, from early sedatives to current antidepressants, has been accompanied by concern about the use of such drugs by people who are not “sick”. Prozac Nation, Listening to Prozac, and similar works have talked about the use of these drugs for “personality enhancement”.[8] Improving one’s personality by anger management, will power, religious conversion, meditation, stress reduction, and similar methods seems unobjectionable. During the 20th century, psychotherapy and counseling also became acceptable. The history of social responses to intoxicants, including alcohol, as “personality” or “mood” enhancers is mixed.

Perhaps the form of human biological enhancement most recently discussed in the press is the use of performance enhancing drugs in sports.[9] “Doping” stories have made headlines—from erythropoietin for endurance, to steroids and human growth hormone for strength and injury recovery, and to stimulants for concentration. At the same time, enhancing performance through better nutrition, conditioning, techniques, equipment, and even mental preparation through sports psychology, has remained uncontroversial. As with cosmetic surgery and neuropharmacology, the interventions used were developed for treatment of various pathologic conditions, but proved to be useful for enhancing healthy people.

While public discussion of enhancement has focused on sports, much of the academic discussion in recent years has focused on genetics.[10] Some discussion has concerned parents (or states) enhancing the next generation through selection of particular genetic variations for children, either through selective abortion or through selection of genetically “better” embryos through pre-implantation genetic diagnosis. In many countries, this technology has been accessible to parents for several years. Other discussions have examined more direct interventions through gene transfer (often referred to inaccurately, or at least, to date, too optimistically, as gene “therapy”), either into existing humans or in germ line transfers to eggs, sperm, or zygotes.[11] These methods are being developed to treat disease, but thus far those efforts have had very limited success.

Cognition provides a final example of enhancement.[12] At this point, biological technologies for improving a healthy person’s cognitive abilities are quite limited. A few pharmaceuticals, such as Adderall, Ritalin, and Modafinil, show some ability to improve concentration or alertness in healthy people. Intense efforts at finding drugs to improve memory in those with dementia may well lead to another category of enhancing interventions. There are also non-pharmaceutical possibilities, notably through neuro-electronic interfaces. These methods of directly connecting the human nervous system to electronic devices are aimed at restoring the function of inputs to the brain (the way cochlear implants can restore hearing to some deaf persons) or the functioning of body parts that need outputs from the brain (as through research aimed at bridging spinal cord injuries). Much older forms of cognitive enhancement, such as education, are not controversial; the prospect of students using “memory pills” is.

C. Five Objections

I have addressed objections to enhancement in several earlier works.[13] I believe those objections fall into five categories: safety, coercion, fairness, integrity, and naturalness.

Safety objections focus on the risks that enhancement technology holds for its recipient. Thus, the bad health effects of anabolic steroids are an argument against their use. This argument must consider the risks that societies already allow their members to take.

Coercion is a more complicated objection. In its most direct form, the argument about frank coercion worries about people being ordered to use enhancements against their will, perhaps by governments or employers. Parental coercion deals with children who cannot give informed consent to risks imposed on them by others, including parents who may have a strong interest in their enhancement. A third argument concerns implicit coercion, when people, in a particular context, feel they have no real choice but to use an enhancement. Weight lifters or bodybuilders, for example, may currently feel that if they want to compete successfully, they must use performance-enhancing drugs. It is possible that in the future, mental enhancements will make aspiring pre-medical students feel compelled to use a memory pill for help with organic chemistry.

Fairness objections focus in two ways on the advantages that the enhanced person will have over those who are not enhanced. One set of concerns centers on particular competition, athletic or otherwise, in which the enhanced person will have an advantage, or can look more broadly at the enhanced person’s whole life. The second set focuses on the overall social unfairness of allowing optional and costly enhancements—if enhancements are expensive, only the rich and their children will be enhanced. At the extreme, these fears include the possibility of an enhanced and self-perpetuating “nobility”, possibly evolving themselves through genetic interventions into a superior species.[14]

Integrity is an issue in two different ways. In an obvious way, if particular enhancements are illegal or against the rules in some competitions, the integrity of the enhancement users and of the competition will be undermined. The more interesting question about integrity, though, asks whether enhancements that are not prohibited undermine the integrity of an activity. Some argue, for example, that biological enhancements contravene the ideal of sports. Although that ideal may rarely or never be fully met, enhancement nonetheless should be banned in order to preserve the value competitors and fans take from sports.[15] Those who believe in meritocracy might make similar arguments against the use of cognitive enhancements by students.

The last objection to enhancement may well be the most powerful component in the popular concern about them: human biological enhancements are objectionable because they are unnatural. This may come from a religious view (they change humans from what God intended), from a view derived from evolution (they change humans from what natural selection, or evolution, or nature “intended”), or just from a more visceral reaction (the “yuck factor”).

Enhancement has a bad reputation in Western cultures, which likely stems from religion. These concerns appear in Genesis:

And the LORD God said, Behold, the man is become as one of us, to know good and evil: and now, lest he put forth his hand, and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live for ever: Therefore the LORD God sent him forth from the garden of Eden, to till the ground from whence he was taken. So he drove out the man; and he placed at the east of the garden of Eden Cherubims, and a flaming sword which turned every way, to keep the way of the tree of life.[16]

Parallel to the Hebrews, the Greeks told of Prometheus, enhancing mankind with the gift of fire, but suffering an eternity of torment as a result; and of Icarus, who used his father’s invention to fly too high and so fell to his death. Modern literature has seen FAUST, FRANKENSTEIN, THE ISLAND OF DR. MOREAU, and, most interestingly, BRAVE NEW WORLD. In each case the attempt of mankind to rival the gods ends in disaster, or, at least, dystopia. (Fictional accounts of successful enhancement are far rarer, whether because they go against our cultural grain or whether they just lack dramatic tension. Arthur C. Clarke’s CHILDHOOD’S END is one interesting example of this approach.[17]) This deep cultural archetype of the dangers of men attempting to “become too much” can certainly affect reactions to bioscience[18] and to human biological enhancement.

II. Are Human Biological Enhancements Meaningfully Different from Other Forms of Human Enhancement?

Human enhancement is everywhere, from clothing to the Internet, from jet planes to cosmetic surgery, and from education to anabolic steroids. “Enhancement,” as a controversial issue, seems to be limited to new technical interventions that change the human body’s structure or functioning, typically through “medicine-like” interventions: drugs or genes, surgical removals or implants. But are those enhancements really different in ways that have meaning, for either ethical or policy analysis?

This section of the article explores that question. It starts by discussing the weak foundations for an important and generally assumed distinction between tools and changes to the human body that enhance our abilities. It then looks at the distinctiveness of human biological enhancements with respect to the five general objections to enhancement discussed above. It follows with a discussion of five other factors that may affect our views of human biological enhancement. It concludes that human biological enhancements for the most part are not meaningfully different from other kinds of human enhancement and that they should not be treated differently just because they are biological enhancements.

A. Tools versus Selves

Reports of tool use by non-human primates, porpoises, and even birds make it increasingly clear that Homo sapiens is not the only tool-using animal, but our tools are clearly central to our existence. Thomas Carlyle wrote “Man is a Tool-using Animal . . . . Nowhere do you find him without Tools; without Tools he is nothing, with Tools he is all.”[19] Over its history, Homo sapiens has enhanced the quality and quantity of its lives mainly through the use of tools. Our species’ hominid ancestors used stone tools for pounding, cutting, and other purposes; our species’ innovations range from clothing and controlled fire to personal computers and nuclear weapons.

Tools, defined broadly, enormously enhance our abilities over those of humans in a “state of nature”. They allow us to eat better, be stronger, move faster, communicate over greater distances, and generally to do more. Yet, with the exception of a few religious sects, such as the Old Order Amish, few people feel qualms about using modern tools. And even the Old Order Amish allow the use of some tools, those similar to the tools used by their ancestors when the sect was founded.

Helping a man change himself so he can throw a discus a foot farther is controversial; letting men build tools to shoot bullets thousands of feet, and shoot rockets thousands or millions of miles, is not. It would be controversial to engineer humans who were capable of even slow and limited flight, yet we do not think twice about crossing the Pacific at enormous speeds and heights. Why?

I think most of us would react that the tool is not the self, or, at least, is not so perceived. Tools are not part of our biological organisms. They can be added or subtracted. They are (usually) inanimate, lifeless objects (although some working animals, such as sheep dogs, are effectively “tools”). Using tools does not change “us.”

But is that really true? Eyeglasses have been part of my life for over forty years. Although I do take them off to sleep, to shower, or to swim, they seem more a part of me than, say, my useless smallest toe. They seem more a part of me than various internal, unperceived and largely unknown organs, such as my appendix or my spleen. Eyeglasses are a medical intervention, not an enhancement, but the point here is that they are “tools” that can feel like part of oneself. And other tools, not used as medical interventions, can produce the same reaction. Athletes in some sports talk of feeling that the bat, the glove, and the racquet are extensions of their arms. In some moods, a personal computer connected to the Internet can feel like another, vastly powerful, organ. Cars, cell phones, and iPods similarly take on deeply personal meanings for people, complete with their own “personalizing” touches, marking the tool as distinctively belonging to the owner— or, perhaps, distinctly part of the owner.

Even apart from tools that blur the distinction between our things and ourselves, why, after all, should we make such a distinction? If we focus on the action performed, the end accomplished, is there a difference between a person using binoculars and a person engineered to have spectacular distance vision? The objection must be to the means, not to the end, which in both cases is better distance vision, but what is the meaningful difference? The next sections of this paper will consider, and dismiss, several ways in which one might argue that tools are inherently different from human biological enhancements. I am not confident that this effort clearly demonstrates that they are not different; I do believe it shows that the argument for a moral distinction between the two is not an easy one.

One other aspect of the tool/self distinction should be noted. There are some interesting things that exist somewhere in the middle of this apparently sharp distinction, tools that are implanted into the body and become “part” of it—heart pacemakers, cochlear implants, and, to some extent, prosthetic limbs. Thus far, these exist for medical reasons, to restore or preserve “normal” functioning. Rapidly improving technologies for connecting neural systems directly with electronic systems hold out the prospect of direct mental control of “tools”[20] or of direct inputs into the brain from artificial sensory organs, implanted or distant.[21] This could be used for restoration, as in restoring lower body motion and sensation to those with spinal cord injuries. It could also be used for enhancement, bringing closer to reality the possibility of “bionic” people or cyborgs, who seem problematic because they are cases where tools have become major components of selves. [22]

On the other hand, fantasies of a rapid spread of cyborgs need to be tempered by an appreciation of the power of tools. If a person can use binoculars, why run the expense, the risk, and, for the near future at least, the lower quality, of an implanted distance vision system? It may be that the first cases of enhancement through implanted tools will occur in injured or disabled people who will need a cochlear implant or artificial retina—with its attendant costs, risks, and quality issues—to restore their abilities, but decide they should try one that enhances their capabilities beyond the normal human range.[23]

B. The Five Objections to Enhancement

Four of the five objections to human biological enhancement face the problem that they also apply both to non-biological enhancements and to human biological enhancement when used in medicine. This lack of distinctiveness is not necessarily a fatal blow to these objections. It might make sense, for example, to use a technology to treat deadly pancreatic cancer while banning its use to sculpt more sharply chiseled biceps for a bodybuilder. One could further argue that it may be preferable to prevent the spread of new bad practices even if their existing uses are too firmly planted to uproot. Nevertheless, the fact that those four objections are not specific to human biological enhancement significantly affects the arguments.

1. Safety

Human biological enhancements certainly may be unsafe. Even those that are approved for medical uses may be unsafe for enhancement uses. First, the medical clinical trials may not have examined their safety in healthy people at the doses used for enhancement. This seems to be the case for anabolic steroids, which athletes use very differently from the way doctors prescribe them. Second, safety is a relative term. A drug or a surgical procedure may be safe enough to use when weighed against the risks of some diseases, but not in the context of another disease, or of the enhancement of a healthy person. Previous medical approvals of enhancing technologies as safe may provide some useful evidence of the enhancement’s safety, but they cannot be conclusive.

The safety objection is, at most, an argument for regulating the safety of human biological enhancements in ways akin to the regulation of the safety of medical interventions. One should note that, even with medical interventions, states generally regulate the safety of drugs and medical devices by requiring pre-market approval, but do not apply such prior safety regulation to medical procedures such as new surgical techniques. But non-biological human enhancements are not subject to any general pre-market safety approval. Nor, for that matter, are most other human activities, from skydiving to playing rugby to watching television. Societies regulate the safety of things for a variety of historical, legal, political, and cultural reasons, usually, but not always, related to the degree of danger they present. There seems to be little reason to treat human biological enhancements differently, but instead safety regulations should be imposed on those enhancements where and how it seems appropriate.

2. Coercion

Coercive enhancement, in all three of its forms (frank, parental, and implicit) does pose distinctive questions because of the nature of the intrusion they involve. Human biological enhancements will almost always involve physical intrusions into a person’s body, either through surgical procedures or biochemical interventions. Such intrusions are not suspect if they are the result of a genuinely voluntary decision, but the law has long provided special protections for a person’s body, ranging from the common law action for battery to the decision by the United States Supreme Court that forcible bodily intrusions by the police could violate the Fifth Amendment’s guarantee of due process of law when they “shocked the conscience”. [24]

Other forms of enhancement will generally not involve this kind of physical intrusion; an employer might, for example, require employees to attend training sessions to enhance their performance without raising substantial concerns. And although medical practice often requires this precise kind of invasion of a person’s body, competent adults have an almost absolute right to refuse medical treatment. The major exception concerns infectious epidemic diseases where one person’s lack of treatment may endanger many others; even in this context, American court decisions upholding mandatory treatment are generally old and may be questioned in light of the growth of civil rights over the past century.[25] Mandatory treatment for mental illness has a more complicated history, but coerced treatment, though not eliminated, has been increasingly limited over the last several decades. [26]

Coercive enhancements will need to be regulated. Frank coercion needs to be limited as appropriate; this may well vary with employers, for example, being more constrained in what they can order employees to do than the military is with respect to soldiers, sailors, and airmen.

Coercion of children is more complicated. The government requires certain enhancements for children, notably education and vaccinations. And we not only allow but encourage and even require parents to coerce their children into other enhancements, like nutrition, study habits, and braces to improve a child’s teeth and smile. In the United States parental discretion in parenting even has some, admittedly poorly defined, constitutional protection.[27] At the same time, we put some, admittedly loose, limits on parental discretion when parents are clearly acting against their children’s best interests. The unusually stringent limitations on children’s participation in risky medical research as to whether or not the parents consent provide one example.[28] Some specific forms of enhancement that are particularly risky might need to be regulated to prevent their use on children. In some cases that will mean that the children can make their own competent decisions when they become adults; this position is widely recommended for genetic tests where the results do not lead to interventions during childhood.[29] The harder questions will revolve around enhancements that are effective only during (or, in the case of embryonic or fetal interventions, before) childhood. Some regulatory scheme, either governmental or professional, may be necessary to limit the use of risky or unproven enhancements in embryos, fetuses, or young children.

Implicit coercion poses the hardest questions. It is said that most television news presenters in the United States have had cosmetic surgery by the time they are 40 years old. That may be the result of implicit coercion; the need to look youthful in order to be competitive in a difficult business. Yet if everyone can be enhanced to the same extent, to retain their own optimal 30 year old appearance, no one’s competitive position is changed. But even though the eventual result is the same, people take the risks of surgery, spend money, and perhaps feel coerced. Similarly, an athlete may not want to take a performance-enhancing drug, but may feel compelled to do so either to protect his or her livelihood or merely to be competitive. In these cases, where everyone engages in the costly behavior (enhancement) to no one’s ultimate benefit, a successful ban on all performance enhancing drugs might improve everyone’s situation.

This may be true if we assume that only the quality of the performance relative to that of the other competitors is important, which might be the case, for example, with many sports. If, on the other hand, the quality of the performance has both a relative value to the actor and an absolute value to others, the situation is more complicated. The quality of medical research might be such an example, where using a cognitive enhancement to become a better researcher both helps one’s own competitive position among researchers and, presumably, helps society by producing better treatments. Each form of biological enhancement may have to be analyzed separately in light of implicit coercion; in some cases, particularly those where the benefits would be only relative, it is likely that either enhancements should be generally banned (if an effective ban is feasible) or people who choose not to be enhanced should be protected from the negative consequences of their choices.

Of course, whether an enhancement only has value relative to the performance of other people or has a more absolute value may not be easy to answer. Is a particular gymnastics routine made possible by an enhancing technology only valuable to the performers whom it makes better than others or does the resulting novelty or beauty have its own value? And, of course, any regulation is likely both to have some costs and to be imperfect. As a practical matter, regulating enhancements in order to avoid implicit coercion may often prove extremely difficult.

3. Fairness

The fairness objection, on the other hand, seems less troublesome. The fairness problems of enhancements are not unique to human biological enhancements, nor are they without plausible regulatory solutions. As President Kennedy said, in a very different context, “Life is unfair”.[30] It is hard to imagine any competition, athletic or otherwise, to which the contestants bring exactly the same physical, mental, and emotional capabilities. Many of those capabilities will be the result of genetic variation, early environment, and chance, none of which the contestant “deserved”. It is not clear why biological cognitive enhancements should be any more, or any less, unfair than the cognitive enhancements that come from good nutrition, family encouragement, good schools, or a preparatory course for college entrance examinations. Nor is it clear that the use of a performance-enhancing drug by an athlete is any more, or less, unfair than having a great coach, excellent equipment, the services of a sports psychologist, or good genes. (Some of these various enhancements, biological or otherwise, may require more or less “work” by the enhanced person than others; that issue is discussed below.) The use of any enhancement that is available only to some may be unfair to those who do not have access to it, whether or not it is a human biological enhancement. One could even imagine a case where biological enhancements were only permitted to make competitions “more fair”, by providing compensating abilities to those who lost out in the genetic, parental, or early life environment lotteries.

It might be argued that in some competitions—athletic, intellectual, occupational, or other—biological enhancements would be too valuable and would be unfair because they would overwhelm all other factors. Professor Max Mehlman makes such an argument about the power of inherited genetic enhancement to make success in life unfair, both within one generation and across succeeding generations. As a result, he calls for banning such enhancements. Alternatively, though, one could solve the fairness problem in that situation by making the enhancement available to all, a strategy already used in some contexts. If we accept primary and secondary education as an “enhancement,” as surely we must, the common response to the fear of unequal access has not been to ban education but to make it a universal entitlement. Although this may be an area where it is harder to dislodge existing practices than to prevent new ones, those worried about the long term unfairness of self-reinforcing inequality may prefer to fight for inheritance taxes and excellent universal education rather than try to regulate still speculative human biological enhancement technologies.

There remains a fairness question of what to do about people who have access to an enhancement, but voluntarily choose not to use it. This issue is, in part, discussed above with regard to implicit coercion. If the costs of foregoing an enhancement are sufficiently dire, one might want to protect people against the coercion implicit in such a choice, as a matter of avoiding coercion more than as a matter of fairness.

But even if the situation is not effectively coercive, we might still feel that fairness requires us to protect some people from the effects of their decision not to enhance. For example, one might (or might not) want to protect people’s choices that are influenced by religion. American employment discrimination law not only bans overt discrimination based on religion, but affirmatively requires employers to make reasonable accommodations to an applicant’s or employee’s religious beliefs, which might involve, for example, special work schedules or exemptions from some clothing rules.[31] Presumably, a religiously motivated choice not to use a human biological enhancement would be covered by the same provision. In other situations we usually allow (or force) people to accept the consequences of their decisions not to choose an enhancing technology, just as we let people live with the results of their educational or investment choices. One might argue that fairness would require the protection of someone who does not want to use a human biological enhancement for principled, but not religious, reasons, only if we concluded that the question of enhancement should be viewed as important or as special as questions of religious observance.

4. Integrity

The integrity objection also applies more broadly than to human biological enhancements. Parallel to the argument about fairness, other kinds of enhancement might undercut “the essence” of the activity. Special equipment or treatment by a sports psychologist may be as inconsistent with “the spirit” of sport as performance-enhancing drugs; test preparation or cram courses may be as inconsistent with meritocracy as cognitive-enhancing pharmaceuticals. Whether human biological enhancements are inconsistent with the integrity of an activity depends on the definition of the “essence” of the activity, which will often be difficult to determine.[32] That, in turn, requires some way of determining whether any one group’s definition of the essential aspects of the activity should be allowed to bind other people with other views. Thus, if some people believe performance-enhancing drugs ruin the meaning of sports, but others, whether they approve of the use of such drugs or not, do not believe their use undermines the value of sports, whose view should control?

Pluralism is one response. One could let those who want “pure” sports have “drug-free leagues” and let others have “open” leagues, just as some people abide by rules governing amateurs and others prefer professional status. To do so would be to consider enhancement a matter of taste, a preference as to which reasonable people might differ. It might (or might not) be appropriate for a government to help leagues enforce their rules, but there seems to be little reason, under the claim of integrity, for a government to ban enhancement for everyone.

5. Naturalness

The final objection, naturalness, is akin to integrity but instead of focusing on the activity affected by the enhancement, it concerns the integrity of the species whose member is enhanced. Like the integrity argument, it requires an agreement on the essence of humanity itself. For some, that definition may be religious. Jewish and Christian scripture holds that God created man in his own image; presumably, changing man from that image would be sinful.[33] For those without a religious basis for their definition, humans in a state of nature might be a plausible measure of appropriate humanity (although there are serious logical problems with the idea that what is “natural” necessarily has normative force, often referred to as “the naturalistic fallacy”[34]).

Both ways of defining “appropriate humanity” face the problem that little about today’s humans resembles those at the time the religious definitions were created, resembling even less humans in a “state of nature”. What we eat, what we wear, how we live, travel, and communicate have all changed markedly as a result of human enhancements. Even our physical beings are longer lived, larger, and generally healthier than in the past. It is not clear why some changes are natural, or religiously licit, and others are unnatural or sinful. And in heterogeneous societies, a group that does come up with a thorough description of religiously or naturally appropriate humanity has the further problem of convincing others that its definition is correct. The feeling that human biological enhancements, at least in more extreme cases, are “wrong” has great emotional appeal and, I suspect, broad popular support, akin to that of the so-called “yuck factor.” Whether this feeling can be justified is less clear.

C. Other Factors

Some other factors seem to be at work in causing controversy about human biological enhancements. They are not strong or self contained enough to constitute independent arguments against enhancements, but are rather perceived distinctions between biological and other enhancements or other concerns that feed public discomfort about biological enhancements. This section discusses five such factors: the physical nature of biological enhancements; their perceived permanence; their unearned nature; their novelty; and, lastly, concern that human biological enhancements are examples of human hubris.

1. Physical?

Some of the feeling that biological enhancements are different may come from the sense that they make physical or, in some cases, biochemical changes in the body when tools or other enhancements do not. It is not clear why physical changes should be crucial, but, in any event, other enhancements do change our bodies. Weight training and good diet change the shapes of our bodies; conditioning and practice change our physical capabilities. Our tools give us calluses and change our muscles and joints (sometimes for the worse). Our clothing changes the texture and color of our skin.

Perhaps most powerfully, though least visibly, enhancement through learning physically changes our brains. Memories and mental skills are embodied in physical changes in how our brains operate. Synapses, the connections between neurons in the brain, get stronger or weaker, are destroyed or are created. Anything that one learns from reading this article exists in the mind because of those physical changes in the brain. Learning to read, learning to type, and learning to play the guitar both cause and are caused by these physical changes to the brain. These changes are as real and physical as, though possibly less tangible than, the changes caused by cosmetic surgery, gene transfer, or cognition enhancing pills.

2. Permanent?

Another factor may be the feeling that biological enhancements are more permanent than using tools or other forms of enhancement. But this distinction also fails. Some biological enhancements may be easy to stop, such as memory-enhancing pills or anabolic steroids. Others may be hard but possible to undo, such as cosmetic surgery. Even gene transfer, when and if it ever becomes feasible, should probably be reversible through counteracting gene transfer. Some biological enhancements might be effectively irreversible, such as those that affect childhood development—drugs that increase a child’s growth might be an example—but most will not be.

In another sense, however, many of these enhancements will be irreversible. An athlete who has steroid enhanced muscles is always different from one who has not, even after the muscles have reverted to normal. But this is true of all human enhancements, and indeed of all human experience. Learning to read has irreversible effects, as does going to law school or falling in love. Biological enhancements seem likely, in general, to be no more and no less irreversible than other enhancements or experiences.

3. Unearned?

The first two factors, physical change and perceived permanence, seem related to the (weak) distinction between tools and selves. The third factor, the unearned nature of biological enhancements, seems related to both fairness and integrity. People may believe that muscles from weight training and good grades from diligent study are earned and therefore good; muscles from anabolic steroids and good grades from cognitive- enhancing pills are unearned and are therefore bad. This assumes first that the enhancement does not require any ethically significant effort. Anabolic steroids do not build muscles in people who do not exercise; they can improve the muscle-building results of exercise. Pills that improve attention would not replace studying but would make it more efficient. Even cosmetic surgery is arguably “earned,” if not by cash payments, then by the pain of the recovery period.

The bigger problem with this idea is that we rarely reward pure effort. Competitions are not judged based on who tries the hardest or prepares most diligently. Those factors are often important, but the performance is determinative, not the effort. The Nobel Prize is not awarded to the hardest working scientist; athletic fame and fortune come from successful results, not mere effort. Many factors other than hard work affect success in most endeavors, including inherited traits, good training, and luck. We may not like this; we may prefer to believe that our successes are completely the result of our own efforts and, hence, “earned” by those efforts. But it takes very little reflection to recognize that many “unearned” factors affect success; it is not clear why biological enhancements should be viewed as peculiarly inappropriate unearned factors.

4. Novel?

A cynic might note one generally applicable distinction between controversial and non-controversial enhancements: the controversial enhancements are newer. Cosmetic surgery, the oldest of the biological enhancements discussed in this article, is also the least controversial and seems to have grown less controversial with time. In vitro fertilization and recombinant genetic engineering were both extremely controversial when invented in the 1970s; both are today routine, at least in most circumstances. Novelty raises some legitimate concerns, primarily safety concerns from the limited extent of our knowledge of the long term effects of an innovation. Novelty, however, does not seem to have any independent ethical significance—at least not in Western culture, which has been changing at a dizzying rate for the last several hundred years.

5. Hubris?

Hubris is the last of these other factors. The Greeks originally used the term to mean presumption toward the gods; it now means overbearing pride, presumption, or arrogance. Adam and Eve, the Tower of Babel, Icarus, Dr. Frankenstein—they all are stories of people who attempted to do what humans should not do. Are we really foolish enough, many ask, to believe that we are wise enough to change ourselves? It is a fair question. There seems little reason to believe that we can successfully plan changes in our species. Our knowledge—our ability to predict the actual consequences of the changes we effect—is certainly limited; our wisdom—our ability to make the ethically or morally appropriate choice even if we could accurately predict the future—is at least equally suspect.

But this question is moot. We are constantly changing our species. Agriculture, writing, and printing vastly changed human life. The revolutions of the last two centuries have made life in the industrial or post-industrial world more distant from the lives of modern subsistence farmers. Based on our history, one powerful way to describe Homo sapiens might be as a species that is constantly reinventing itself. Human biological enhancements may be a new method of reinvention, but they are surely not uniquely, or even particularly, susceptible to the charge of hubris.

D. Concluding Thoughts on whether Human Biological Enhancement Is Different

The general approach of this section has been to compare new human biological enhancements with existing forms of enhancement and to show that, in many ways, they are not very different. One could argue, as an anonymous peer reviewer has suggested, that even if any enhancement differs in any particular way only slightly from existing, well accepted approaches, the combination of a number of small differences may be important. That may be true, but I would require an argument about why that combination made an ethically significant difference.

One might say that if people react viscerally against a particular enhancement, that reaction itself is evidence that such a culmination of small differences has become significant. I see no reason to believe, as a factual matter, that popular repugnance is necessarily a consequence of such a summation of small differences. It seems more likely to be a negative reaction to some part of the enhancement. Neither am I willing to accept repugnance as an independent ethical argument. One’s sense of repugnance to something—whether an unusual sexual activity or an odd-smelling food—may be a good reason not to indulge it oneself. On its own, it is not a good argument for prohibiting interested people from trying it.

III. International Implications

This article was written by a middle-aged, white, male, American law professor. That is not an apology, but it is a limitation. The culture from which I have tried to draw insights and conclusions is not the culture of all 300 million residents of the United States and certainly not that of our entire species. But the fact that the roughly 6.4 billion members of Homo sapiens form thousands of different cultures, organized into hundreds of different sovereignties, has crucial implications for the future of human biological enhancement.

A. Cultural Diversity

Different cultures react differently to various human biological enhancements. The wealth of a culture will affect what enhancements are available, as will its scientific and medical infrastructure. The economic and social conditions may make some enhancements more, and others less, interesting. A culture where memorized texts are important might be especially interested in memory-enhancing drugs. A culture that does not participate in the Olympics may well not be very interested in performance-enhancing drugs for Olympic athletes.

Particular enhancements might be unacceptable in some cultures for specific reasons, as, for example, a pig-based implant might be unacceptable in Jewish or Muslim cultures.[35] Some cultures might find the whole idea of human biological enhancement uninteresting if what their culture values most cannot be affected by these kinds of enhancements. Thus, a culture with a strong religious orientation, away from a worldly life, might find most enhancements irrelevant, distasteful, or possibly irreligious. It would, however, be rash to generalize too strongly about how certain kinds of cultures would react to some kinds of enhancement. A wonderful fictional example of a religious use of a modern technology comes from an Arthur C. Clarke short story where Tibetan Buddhists install a computer to complete a prayer cycle, with surprising consequences.[36]

But cultural variation is interesting and important in another sense. One way to determine what is “natural” is to follow an Aristotelian definition of natural law—natural law comprises those rules that all humans (or all human cultures) accept. The existence of some positive views of particular human biological enhancements would be evidence that there is no universally acknowledged natural law against them.

B. International Rivalry

The billions of living humans are not only members of thousands of different cultures, but are governed by several hundred sovereign national governments. The existence of different sovereignties adds further complications to the questions of human biological enhancement—some of those sovereignties may see human biological enhancement as a competitive advantage. We know the former East Germany used performance-enhancing drugs to improve its competitiveness in the Olympic Games and other international sports competitions.[37] It seems unlikely that a government will care enough about its population’s beauty to encourage enhancing cosmetic surgery, but other uses are more plausible.

Military applications are the most obvious. Human biological enhancements might yield better soldiers, for offensive or defensive purposes. Already, the United States Defense Department is spending many millions of dollars on research projects in cognitive enhancement.[38] These range from research on maintaining alertness and normal cognitive function in the face of limited sleep to efforts to use direct neuro-electronic connections for direct mental control of weapons. Although long term genetic intervention—the creation of armies of cloned warriors—seems unlikely, somatic cell gene transfer to improve soldiers’ physical abilities, for either the short or the long term, seems plausible. So do performance-enhancing drugs.

But not all competition is military. Some countries already see advantages in competing in the global economy with an educated workforce. Biological enhancements might prove useful in improving the education of a country’s population. Nations seem to compete in scientific research for short term economic benefits, but also for prestige, military spin offs, and sheer pride. Such countries might well encourage human biological enhancements that improved their researchers—and their researchers’ results. Even personality or mood enhancers could be of great interest to a national government, perhaps not as much for international competition as for avoiding domestic disaffection and possibly for improving economic outcomes. National governments might encourage, or compel, the use of human biological enhancements for reasons we see as good (public health), bad (political control), or relatively unimportant (Olympic medal counts). But, if important enhancements are available, governments that have the means to use them will not ignore them.

C. Transnational Regulation

The existence of different sovereignties complicates regulation of enhancement. If certain kinds of enhancement are felt to be so bad, for whatever reason, that they must be banned, to be effective, all of the world’s states would have to enact—and to enforc— the ban. More subtly, the competitive incentives discussed above mean that a ban even in one country might be undercut by the use of the enhancement in competing countries. Without such an international ban, countries that would like to ban an enhancement may not feel able to do so for competitive reasons. Even if they do ban the enhancements, they will then have the problem of preventing their nationals from becoming “enhancement tourists” who go outside the country to get the enhancements they want. But universal bans on forms of human biological enhancement will be difficult to create and probably impossible to enforce.

Unless they embody, or become, “customary” international law, international treaties or conventions are enforceable only in countries that ratify them. It may well prove impossible to convince every country to ratify a treaty banning some or all human biological enhancements, particularly if the objections are based on cultural responses that are not universally shared. Even if most countries are willing to sign, the remaining countries might see an opportunity to build a lucrative specialty as an “enhancement haven”. And, of course, even if a convention were adopted universally, it might not be enforced. At least six international conventions ban slavery and various forms of forced labor,[39] yet it is estimated that millions of people remain slaves.[40]

The Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons provides another useful example; 187 countries have ratified this treaty.[41] At least three of those that have not ratified the treaty have produced, or are widely believed to have produced, nuclear weapons: India, Pakistan, and Israel. North Korea, which is believed to be producing nuclear weapons, had probably been violating the Treaty for several years before it formally withdrew in 2003. Some countries that have ratified and that have not withdrawn from the Treaty are believed to have violated, or to be violating, its provisions by seeking to develop nuclear weapons, including Iran, currently, and Iraq, in the past. Developing nuclear weapons is an enormous scientific and industrial endeavor, requiring large, difficult-to-conceal facilities and costing billions of dollars.

Human biological enhancements are likely to be much easier and less expensive to develop and produce. They will usually flow from medical developments that will involve publicly available drugs and devices and openly described procedures. These “dual use” technologies should make it easy for a country to secretly enhance at least some of its citizens. A successful universal prohibition of an attractive enhancement seems impossible.

Professor Mehlman has discussed the problems of international bans on enhancement in detail with regard to inherited human genetic enhancements. Although he strongly supports such bans, his analysis is not encouraging. He calls, ultimately, for the use of American economic and political pressure to “encourage” other countries to adopt and enforce such bans and, at the extreme, American military intervention to compel their enforcement.[42] The feasibility of such a policy is questionable; recent events in the Middle East make its attractiveness – inside and outside the United States – minimal. Any policy on the regulation of human biological enhancements will have to confront the reality that attractive enhancements almost certainly cannot be universally and enforceably forbidden.

Conclusion

Explanations exist; they have existed for all time; there is always a well-known solution to every human problem—neat, plausible, and wrong.

H.L. Mencken[43]

This is the fifth time that I have written about human biological enhancement. It will not be the last. Each time I write about this question, I see new issues and new arguments; each time I believe I am approaching nearer to the core of the problem, but I am still not close to being comfortable, either viscerally or intellectually, with a set of final conclusions about human biological enhancement.

I do believe, though, that the area of enhancement will have no good easy answers. Many of the broad ethical concerns about human biological enhancement seem to me unfounded. In most respects these technologies are not ethically different from other enhancing technologies we have long used and accepted.

At the same time, this article is not intended as an argument that biological enhancement should exist in an unregulated, laissez faire status. Each kind of enhancement will need to be treated on its own, weighing the benefits of the technology against the costs it may impose, as well as the costs of regulation. There will be what I would consider good reasons to restrict or even ban some human biological enhancements. And societies may choose to act for reasons I would consider irrational; for the most part, at least where human rights are not involved, people, individually and collectively, are entitled to act on their tastes, preferences, and biases. California bans human consumption of horse meat; Singapore severely restricts the use of chewing gum. Neither action seems to me “rational”, but neither seems improper. Societies may well choose to limit or ban some enhancements for similar reasons, although, as noted above, international pressures may limit the effectiveness of those efforts.

The “right answer” about human biological enhancement will surely vary from technology to technology, from culture to culture, and from time to time. We will not be helped to the right answer by viewing human biological enhancements as qualitatively different from other human endeavors. Instead, like all new technologies, we will need to ask whether and how these technologies can be used “to make greater, as in value or desirability” our lives, our societies, and our world.


[1] Stanford University. The author would like to thank the many audiences on whom these ideas have been tried out, an anonymous peer reviewer, and his very diligent research assistant, Jason Tarricone.

[2] The World Transhumanist Association is a group that supports human biological enhancement. See World Transhumanist Ass’n Home Page, http://www.transhumanism.org (last visited Oct. 8, 2005).

[3] See ALLEN BUCHANAN ET AL., FROM CHANCE TO CHOICE: GENETICS AND JUSTICE (Cambridge Univ. Press 2001); CARL ELLIOTT, BETTER THAN WELL: AMERICAN MEDICINE MEETS THE AMERICAN DREAM (W. W. Norton & Co. 2003); Frances M. Kamm, Is There a Problem with Enhancement?, AM. J. BIOETHICS, May-June 2005, at 5; MAXWELL J. MEHLMAN, WONDERGENES: GENETIC ENHANCEMENT AND THE FUTURE OF SOCIETY (Univ. of Ind. Press 2003); ENHANCING HUMAN TRAITS: ETHICAL AND SOCIAL IMPLICATIONS (Erik Parens ed., Georgetown Univ. Press 1998); PRESIDENT’S COUNCIL ON BIOETHICS, BEYOND THERAPY: BIOTECHNOLOGY AND THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS (Regan Books 2003); SHEILA ROTHMAN & DAVID ROTHMAN, THE PURSUIT OF PERFECTION: THE PROMISE AND PERILS OF MEDICAL ENHANCEMENT (Pantheon 2003); Michael J. Sandel, The Case Against Perfection, ATLANTIC MONTHLY, Apr. 2004, at 50.

[4] See the discussion of this distinction in Eric Juengst, What Does Enhancement Mean?, in ENHANCING HUMAN TRAITS: ETHICAL AND SOCIAL IMPLICATIONS, supra note 2, at 29.

[5] PGA Tour, Inc. v. Martin, [2001] USSC 41; 532 U.S. 661 (2001); Henry T. Greely, Disabilities, Enhancements and the Meanings of Sport, 15 STAN. L. & POL’Y REV. 99, 103-12 (2004).

[6] Shortly after the Food and Drug Administration approved cochlear implants for children in 1990, the National Association of the Deaf (NAD) opposed their use. See John Barry, Silence Is Golden?, MIAMI HERALD, Sept. 22, 1991, at 8; Gene Warner, Girl, 5, Makes Medical History with Ear Implant, BUFFALO NEWS, June 23, 1991. In October 2000, however, NAD’s Board of Directors expressed cautionary approval of the implants. COCHLEAR IMPLANT COMM., NAT’L ASS’N OF THE DEAF, NAD POSITION STATEMENT ON COCHLEAR IMPLANTS 1 (2000), http://www.nad.org/site/pp.asp?c=foINKQMBF&b=138140. See MICHAEL CHOROST, REBUILT: HOW BECOMING PART COMPUTER MADE ME MORE HUMAN 130-35 (Houghton Mifflin 2005).

[7] See ENHANCING HUMAN TRAITS: ETHICAL AND SOCIAL IMPLICATIONS, supra note 2.

[8] See ELIZABETH WURTZEL, PROZAC NATION: YOUNG AND DEPRESSED IN AMERICA (Riverhead Books 1997); PETER D. KRAMER, LISTENING TO PROZAC: THE LANDMARK BOOK ABOUT ANTIDEPRESSANTS AND REMAKING THE SELF (Penguin Books 1997); ELLIOTT, supra note 2.

[9] Greely, supra note 4, at 112-25, 128-32.

[10] See BUCHANAN ET AL., supra note 2; MEHLMAN, supra note 2.

[11] See DESIGNING OUR DESCENDANTS: THE PROMISES AND PERILS OF GENETIC MODIFICATIONS (Audrey R. Chapman & Mark S. Frankel eds., Johns Hopkins Univ. Press 2003); SUSANNAH BARUCH ET AL., GENETICS & PUB. POLICY CTR., HUMAN GERMLINE GENETIC MODIFICATION: ISSUES AND OPTIONS FOR POLICYMAKERS (2005), available at http://www.dnapolicy.org/content.labvelocity/pdfs/6/68176.pdf.

[12] Henry T. Greely, The Social Consequences of Advances in Neuroethics: Legal Problems; Legal Perspectives, in NEUROETHICS (Judy Illes ed., forthcoming 2005).

[13] Henry T. Greely, Human Genetic Enhancement: A Lawyer’s View, Review of Wondergenes: Genetic Enhancement and the Future of Society by Maxwell J. Mehlman, MED. HUMAN. REV., Fall 2003, at 42 (book review); Greely, supra note 4; Henry T. Greely, Seeking More Goodly Creatures, CEREBRUM, Fall 2004, at 49; Greely, supra note 11.

[14] Mehlman talks of our need to take action to avoid a “genobility” composed of the rich who genetically enhance their children, generation after generation, possibly ultimately becoming a new species. See MEHLMAN, supra note 2, at 120.

[15] Thomas Murray, Director of the Hastings Center, has made this argument. See Michael Dobie, Of Might Mice & Super Men, NEWSDAY, March 19, 2005, at B10; Mark Sappenfield, Pervasiveness of Pills Dulls Outrage Against Steroid-Using Stars, CHRISTIAN SCI. MONITOR, Dec. 10, 2004, at 1.

[16] Genesis 3:22-24 (King James). The story of the Tower of Babel is another example of mankind being punished for overreaching. Genesis 11:1-9 (King James).

[17] ARTHUR C. CLARKE, CHILDHOOD’S END (Ballantine 1953).

[18] See generally, JON TURNEY, FRANKENSTEIN’S FOOTSTEPS: SCIENCE, GENETICS AND POPULAR CULTURE (Yale Univ. Press 2000).

[19] THOMAS CARLYLE, SARTOR RESARTUS 31 (Univ. of Cal. Press 2000) (1831).

[20] See e.g., Jose M. Carmena et al., Learning to Control a Brain-Machine Interface for Reaching and Grasping by Primates, 1 PUB. LIBR. SCI. BIOLOGY 193 (2003); Jonathan R. Wolpaw & Dennis J. McFarland, Control of a Two-Dimensional Movement Signal by a Noninvasive Brain-Computer Interface in Humans, 101 PROC. NAT’L ACAD. SCI. U.S. 17849 (2004).

[21] CHOROST, supra note 5 (cochlear implants); Mark C. Peterman et al., Localized Chemical Release from an Artificial Synapse Chip, 101 PROC. NAT’L ACAD. SCI. U.S. 9951 (2004) (artificial retina); A. Asohan, Leading Humanity Forward, STAR (Malay.), October 14, 2003 (discussing Prof. Kevin Warwick giving himself a new sense, sonar-based distance finding, through a neuro-electronic interface).

[22] Gregory Stock discusses the difference between capabilities derived from tools and those from tools embedded within us. A person with a cochlear implant is a cyborg; a person with a hearing aid is a “fyborg” – a functional cyborg. GREGORY STOCK, REDESIGNING HUMANS: CHOOSING OUR GENES, CHANGING OUR FUTURE (Mariner Books 2003).

[23] The character Geordi La Forge from Star Trek: The Next Generation provides a fictional example. Blind from birth, his artificial vision implant allows him to “see” the entire electromagnetic spectrum, an ability that, in his role as chief engineer, comes in handy from time to time. Non-fictional examples are provided by people who, when they get laser eye surgery to improve below normal distance vision, ask the surgeon to try to give them better than normal distance vision. William Saletan, The Beam in Your Eye, SLATE, April 17, 2005, http://www.slate.com/id/2116858/.

[24] Rochin v. California, [1952] USSC 3; 342 U.S. 165 (1952).

[25] MARK A. HALL ET AL., HEALTH LAW 783-805 (6th ed. 2004); but cf. LAWRENCE O. GOSTIN, PUBLIC HEALTH LAW: POWER, DUTY, RESTRAINT 204-24 (Univ. of Cal. Press 2001).

[26] GEORGE J. ALEXANDER & ALAN W. SCHEFLIN, LAW AND MENTAL DISORDER (1998).

[27] Meyer v. Nebraska, [1923] USSC 154; 262 U.S. 390 (1923) (the state cannot prevent parents from having children learn a foreign language); Pierce v. Soc’y of Sisters[1925] USSC 168; , 268 U.S. 510 (1925) (the state cannot prevent parents from sending children to private schools).

[28] Additional Protections for Children Involved as Subjects in Research, 45 C.F.R. §§ 46.401-.409 (2005).

[29] The Am. Soc’y of Human Genetics Bd. of Dirs. & The Am. Coll. of Med. Genetics Bd. of Dirs., Points to Consider: Ethical, Legal, and Psychosocial Implications of Genetic Testing in Children and Adolescents, 57 AM. J. HUM. GENET. 1233 (1995), available at http://genetics.faseb.org/genetics/ashg/pubs/policy/pol-13.htm (stating that “If the medical or psychosocial benefits of a genetic test will not accrue until adulthood, as in the case of carrier status or adult-onset diseases, genetic testing generally should be deferred”) (emphasis in original).

[30] President John F. Kennedy, News Conference at the State Department Auditorium (March 21, 1962) (transcript available in the John F. Kennedy Library and Museum), available at http://www.jfklibrary.org/jfk_press_conference_620321.html. The full quotation is “There is always inequity in life. Some men are killed in a war, and some men are wounded, and some men never leave the country, and some men are stationed in the Antarctic, and some are stationed in San Francisco. It’s very hard in military or personal life to assure complete equality. Life is unfair.” Kennedy was responding to a question about the unfairness of recalling National Guard forces that had earlier seen hard service to active duty.

[31] Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 § 701(j), 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(j) (2005).

[32] Justice Scalia made this argument in the Casey Martin case, as he castigated the Court for trying to define, or to divine, the “essence” of golf:

If one assumes, however, that the PGA Tour has some legal obligation to play classic, Platonic golf—and if one assumes the correctness of all the other wrong turns the Court has made to get to this point—then we Justices must confront what is indeed an awesome responsibility. It has been rendered the solemn duty of the Supreme Court of the United States, laid upon it by Congress in pursuance of the Federal Government’s power “to regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States,” U.S. Const., Art. I, § 8, cl. 3, to decide What Is Golf. I am sure that the Framers of the Constitution, aware of the 1457 edict of King James II of Scotland prohibiting golf because it interfered with the practice of archery, fully expected that sooner or later the paths of golf and government, the law and the links, would once again cross, and that the judges of this august Court would some day have to wrestle with that age-old jurisprudential question, for which their years of study in the law have so well prepared them: Is someone riding around a golf course from shot to shot really a golfer? The answer, we learn, is yes. The Court ultimately concludes, and it will henceforth be the Law of the Land, that walking is not a “fundamental” aspect of golf.

Either out of humility or out of self-respect (one or the other) the Court should decline to answer this incredibly difficult and incredibly silly question. To say that something is “essential” is ordinarily to say that it is necessary to the achievement of a certain object. But since it is the very nature of a game to have no object except amusement (that is what distinguishes games from productive activity), it is quite impossible to say that any of a game’s arbitrary rules is “essential.”

PGA Tour, Inc. v. Martin, [2001] USSC 41; 532 U.S. 661, 670-71 (2001) (Scalia, J., dissenting).

[33] It appears that Islam does not hold that Allah created man in his own image. Instead, “Allah is unique, unimaginable and highly exalted above his creation. He can never and in no way be compared with mankind, who are his creatures and servants.” Christine Schirrmacher, The Fall of Man and the Redemption of Mankind (unpublished essay, on file with author, (June 11, 1997), available at http://contra-mundum.org/schirrmacher/fall.html.

[34] For a brief discussion of the naturalistic fallacy, see Owen D. Jones & Timothy H. Goldsmith, Law and Behavioral Biology, 105 COLUM. L. REV. 405, 484-85 (2005); Owen D. Jones, On the Nature of Norms: Biology, Morality, and the Disruption of Order, 98 MICH. L. REV. 2072, 2087-88 (2000).

[35] Although at least Jewish religious leaders do accept the transplantation of pig heart valves in humans when medically necessary. See Fred Rosner, Pig Organs for Transplantation into Humans: A Jewish View, 66 MOUNT SINAI J. MED. 314 (1999), available at http://www.mssm.edu/msjournal/66/PAGE314_319.PDF. See also Jules Crittenden, Advance Seen on Pig-to-Human Transplants, BOSTON HERALD, Sept. 18, 1998, at 26.

[36] ARTHUR C. CLARKE, THE NINE BILLION NAMES OF GOD (reissue ed., New Am. Library 1987).

[37] STEVEN UNGERLEIDER, FAUST’S GOLD: INSIDE THE EAST GERMAN DOPING MACHINE (2001).

[38] See Jonathan D. Moreno, DARPA On Your Mind, CEREBRUM, Fall 2004, at 91.

[39] Universal Declaration of Human Rights, G.A. Res. 217A, at art. 4, U.N. GAOR, 3d Sess., 1st plen. mtg., U.N. Doc. A/810 (Dec. 10, 1948), available at http://daccessdds.un.org/doc/RESOLUTION/GEN/NR0/043/88/IMG/NR004388.pdf?OpenElement; United Nations, International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights art. 8, opened for signature Dec. 16, 1966, 999 U.N.T.S. 171, available at http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/a_ccpr.htm; League of Nations, Slavery Convention, Sept. 25[1927] LNTSer 19; , 1926, 60 L.N.T.S. 253, available at http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/f2sc.htm; International Labour Organization, Forced Labour Convention, June 28, 1930, 39 U.N.T.S. 55, available at http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/31.htm; International Labour Organization, Abolition of Forced Labour Convention, June 25, 1957, 320 U.N.T.S. 291, available at http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/32.htm; United Nations Convention for the Suppression of the Traffic in Persons and of the Exploitation of the Prostitution of Others, Dec. 2, 1949, 96 U.N.T.S. 271, available at http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/33.htm.

[40] See, e.g., Pius Kamau, Slavery a Reality Even Here, DENVER POST, June 23, 2005, at B7; Nicholas D. Kristof, After the Brothel, N.Y. TIMES, Jan. 26, 2005, at A17.

[41] Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, opened for signature July 1, 1968, 21 U.S.T. 483, 729 U.N.T.S. 161, available at http://www.state.gov/t/np/trty/16281.htm.

[42] MEHLMAN, supra note 2, at 152-54.

[43] H. L. Mencken, The Divine Afflatus, N.Y. EVENING MAIL, Nov. 16, 1917, reprinted in PREJUDICES: SECOND SERIES 158 (Octagon Books 1977). An interesting side note about this quotation is that it is widely reported on the Internet as “For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong.” It is possible, of course, that Mencken paraphrased his own quotation at some point after its initial publication in 1917, but it is equally possible that the many Internet sites have fed off of one another, with one misquote spiraling into dozens more. Interestingly, and somewhat disturbingly, even purported quotation websites, such as BrainyQuote, have gotten this quotation wrong. BrainyQuote.com, H. L. Mencken Quotes, http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/h/h_l_mencken.html (last visited Oct. 8, 2005). They seem not to have bothered to look up the quotations they share with the world. Even odder is the fact that two different collections of Mencken’s writings have different versions of the quotation contained in the same essay, “The Divine Afflatus.” A MENCKEN CHRESTOMATHY published the quotation as follows: “Explanations exist; they have existed for all times, for there is always an easy solution to every human problem – neat, plausible, and wrong.” H. L. Mencken, The Divine Afflatus, in A MENCKEN CHRESTOMATHY 443 (Alfred A. Knopf 1949) (emphasis added). If any reader of this article can provide more information about this Mencken quotation, the author (and his research assistant) would be very interested in learning it.


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