Friday, July 19, 2019

Natality, the Capacity of Being Oneself, and a Ban On Instrumentalization :: Ethical Issues

In modern day society with our rapid development of scientific capabilities, Jurgen Habermas raises our awareness on developing biotechnology and human genetic engineering. He brings up a question pertaining not only to morals, but ethics of this newly developed technology. In this section of the book Habermas agrees that although some forms of genetic manipulations are morally acceptable for screening to rule out diseases, some unbalanced influences threaten future humans and the status of authenticity. However, the problematic character is the moral convictions and norms that situates in forms of ‘being’, which are reproduced through the members’ communicative action. First of all, natality is the production or birth rate of new individuals. Habermas interprets Hannah Arendt that, â€Å"every single birth, being invested with hope for something entirely other to come and break the chain of eternal recurrence, is to be seen in the eschatological light of the biblical promise: â€Å"a child has been born on to us† (H 58). Eternal recurrence also called eternal return per Nietzsche is the life you now live it and have lived it. Eternal recurrence implies a new morality-cheating life of its death. Each time a child is born, so is a new life history. Unfortunately, natural fate is essential for the capacity of being oneself and so the body doesn't lose its worth and feelings of authenticity. Ultimately, the modified person of a suffered socialized fate would see his â€Å"self† slip away and would not be the â€Å"author† of the decisions that affect their lives (H 59,60). It is a false belief that humans desire good things ( Socrates). â€Å"To avoid this, we can achieve continuity of a life history only because we may refer, for establishing the difference between what we are and what happens to us beyond socialization† (H 60). In addition, the capacity of being oneself or authenticity assumes we are inexchangeable. It is for this â€Å"capacity of being oneself† that the â€Å"intention of another person† and trading upon our life history through genetic programs might primarily turn out to be disruptive† (H 57). It fails universalizability test. It is like science is playing God and humans are disposable. Birth constitutes a beginning we should and cannot control. â€Å"No man could be master of himself, except of God's bounty, he was wise enough already to know where the gift came† (L, Augustine 46). Natality, the Capacity of Being Oneself, and a Ban On Instrumentalization :: Ethical Issues In modern day society with our rapid development of scientific capabilities, Jurgen Habermas raises our awareness on developing biotechnology and human genetic engineering. He brings up a question pertaining not only to morals, but ethics of this newly developed technology. In this section of the book Habermas agrees that although some forms of genetic manipulations are morally acceptable for screening to rule out diseases, some unbalanced influences threaten future humans and the status of authenticity. However, the problematic character is the moral convictions and norms that situates in forms of ‘being’, which are reproduced through the members’ communicative action. First of all, natality is the production or birth rate of new individuals. Habermas interprets Hannah Arendt that, â€Å"every single birth, being invested with hope for something entirely other to come and break the chain of eternal recurrence, is to be seen in the eschatological light of the biblical promise: â€Å"a child has been born on to us† (H 58). Eternal recurrence also called eternal return per Nietzsche is the life you now live it and have lived it. Eternal recurrence implies a new morality-cheating life of its death. Each time a child is born, so is a new life history. Unfortunately, natural fate is essential for the capacity of being oneself and so the body doesn't lose its worth and feelings of authenticity. Ultimately, the modified person of a suffered socialized fate would see his â€Å"self† slip away and would not be the â€Å"author† of the decisions that affect their lives (H 59,60). It is a false belief that humans desire good things ( Socrates). â€Å"To avoid this, we can achieve continuity of a life history only because we may refer, for establishing the difference between what we are and what happens to us beyond socialization† (H 60). In addition, the capacity of being oneself or authenticity assumes we are inexchangeable. It is for this â€Å"capacity of being oneself† that the â€Å"intention of another person† and trading upon our life history through genetic programs might primarily turn out to be disruptive† (H 57). It fails universalizability test. It is like science is playing God and humans are disposable. Birth constitutes a beginning we should and cannot control. â€Å"No man could be master of himself, except of God's bounty, he was wise enough already to know where the gift came† (L, Augustine 46).

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