Peter Singer Supports Eugenics
We shouldn't be surprised that Princeton's bioethics professor Peter Singer supports genetic engineering of progeny--as he does in this article. After all, Singer rejects the idea that human life has intrinsic value and supports infanticide of babies up to one year of age based on whether keeping the baby would serve the interests of the family.
As to the fear of genetic engineering bringing back the discredited eugenics mindset, Singer breezily dismisses the prospect. He sophistically compares genetically enhancing our children as being equivalent to giving them expensive educational toys "to maximize their learning potential." He then seeks to distinguish the horror that eugenics spawned in the past with the great benefit we can achieve if we but embrace the potential of a new eugenics: "Many will condemn this as a resurgence of 'eugenics,' the view, especially popular in the early twentieth century, that hereditary traits should be improved through active intervention. So it is, in a way, and in the hands of authoritarian regimes, genetic selection could resemble the evils of earlier forms of eugenics, with their advocacy of odious, pseudoscientific official policies, particularly concerning 'racial hygiene.' In liberal, market driven societies, however, eugenics will not be coercively imposed by the state for the collective good. Instead, it will be the outcome of parental choice and the workings of the free market." The primary problem, for Singer in such a system would be that the rich would be able to afford to enhance their kids, while the poor could not.
Singer's analysis conveniently forgets that eugenics-inspired forced sterilization was first imposed on the "unfit" here in the United States as a direct result of democratic processes. These laws were explicitly upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in the infamous 1927 case of Buck v. Bell in which Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote, "Three generations of idiots is enough." The Nazis actually imported much of their racial hygiene laws from us. Thus, free societies certainly do not provide an inoculation against the pernicious effects of eugenics.
Secondly, the idea that laissez faire eugenics would victimize no one ignores the almost irresistable power of peer pressure. Even if the law did not require enhancement of children (and the concomitant eradication of the less intelligent or talented, whether through abortion or infanticide), the pressure would be on to do just that--a genetic arms race that Singer acknowledges could arise.
Finally, eugenics consciousness would almost inevitably lead to evil, not because it was voluntary or government-mandated, but rather, because at its core eugenics rejects the intrinsic, equal value of human life. Once that philosophical step is taken, who thrives and who is oppressed becomes merely a matter of who has the political power to decide.


6 Comments:
WHY does this man hate the disabled so much? WHY does he think having a disability is somehow "painful" and "miserable," not just for the individual involved but for the families?
I cannot even understand the mindset of somebody like this. It's so demented, and the beliefs have been historically discredited.
Wesley, I don't like the idea of creating embryos and only selecting some for implantation.
But it could be argued that a couple who carry some undesirable genetic trait - sickle cell, for instance - and who elect for that reason to adopt rather than have children of their own are practicing eugenics. And I think the idea of the monstrosity of eugenics (which it is in many forms) prevents us from being reasonable about discouraging women from having babies they can't care for. (I mean birth control or tubal ligation, not abortion.) I remember reading some time back about a woman here in Memphis whose mental retardation is so severe she can't take care of herself. She lives with her mother, who combs her hair and ties her shoes. She has had 10 children (and apparently there is no concern for finding whoever has been taking advantage of her) and there was controversy about whether to tie her tubes, do Norplant, or whatever, to keep her from having more children for her mother to try to care for. Because of the e-word, even though that's not really the issue. I think we'd all benefit from a big public dialog about EXACTLY what we are going to call eugenics and EXACTLY what is immoral or distasteful about it.
Laura: What Singer and most bioethicists are supporting goes far beyond removing a gene that causes, say Huntington's chorea. They want to increase intelligence, looks (however that is measured), strength, etc. They presume to decide what human capacities are better and which worse, who has a higher worth and who less. People with Down's syndrome are being wiped off the face of the earth, and frankly, they are some of the most beautiful human beings I have ever met. So, yes. I agree. We should have that very discussion. Thanks for writing.
Susan: Singer would be puzzled that you would think that of him. He is a utilitarian. He doesn't hate individuals. He just wants to increase happiness and decrease suffering by promoting "interests." The problem is, that disabled people are often seen as being part of the suffering and unhappiness part of that equation.
But realize, he promotes infanticide, not because a baby might be disabled, but because a baby, to him, isn't a person. Thus, any baby can be killed if it furthers the interests of a family because a baby cannot value his or her life and is not self aware over time. Hence, they have no right to life.
b to the t: aborting a baby with Down syndrome doesn't cure that baby. It kills it. If you create embryos and test them for Huntingdon's, so that you don't implant the ones that test positive, you are giving life to the embryos you want and death to the ones you don't want. It comes down to whether you think that embryo is a person or not. For those who don't think the embryo is a person, what you are doing makes perfect sense. For those who do think the embryo is a person, what you are doing is selecting your own offspring for death because they are not acceptable to you. You can disagree with this point of view, as we can disagree with yours.
B to the T: Singer was perfectly okay with genetic enhancing, not just cancer prevention. I mentioned his worry about the rich having access and the poor not, which is not a moral argument against eugenics.
Singer believes it is acceptable to murder babies because they are not "persons." He has stated that people in PVS should be used in medical experiments instead of primates. Don't tell me that he is anything but a believer in eugenics.
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