UN Head Urges World to Regulate Biotechnology--Yadda, Yadda, Yadda
Excuse my cynicism, but UN Head Kofi Annan's urging that the international community regulate biotechnology seems like so much hot air to me. Of course, he is right: We should regulate biotechnology. But based on how the "international community" does business these days, how effective would such regulations be?
One problem is that there is utterly no consensus on what should be regulated, and even if there were, what would the international community do to dissenting states? Look at the cloning issue: By a 3-1 margin, the General Assembly called upon member states to outlaw all human cloning "inasmuch as they are incompatible with human dignity and the protection of human life." Well, that and six bits will buy you a cup of coffee. This was an important ethical declaration--albeit, like almost all UN actions, nonbinding--which gets us to the heart of the problem. Dissenting countries, like the UK and China, just shrugged their shoulders and kept on cloning.
And here is another problem with the kind of international regulation that Annan is calling for: It depends on consensus and thus becomes quickly shackled to the lowest common denominator. This point was brought home to me a few years ago when I was in Portugal debating euthanasia at a Fulbright Commission bioethics conference. At the farewell dinner, I got into a rather heated discussion with a UN technocrat who also spoke at the event (about cloning). He was very agitated with me, and accused me of not believing in "dialogue." I was taken aback. "How can you say that?" I asked. "I flew 6,000 miles to be here. I sat next to people with whom I profoundly disagree. I was cordial and collegial. I did not raise my voice. I engaged in no ad hominem. I backed up my assertions with evidence. Now it's up to the audience to decide whether they agree with me or not."
"But you do not believe in dialogue," he repeated testily. "You only care about what you believe."
That's when I got it: To the internationalist way of thinking, it isn't the actual policy that is important. Rather, it is maintaining consensus and comity. Thus my protagonist believed that I should have been willing to accommodate some euthanasia legality. In that way, supporters would have the satisfaction of knowing that euthanasia is available in at least a few circumstances, while opponents would have the satisfaction of knowing that legal restrictions limit the actual practice of euthanasia to some degree. Hence, a supposed end to conflict. The problem, of course, is that there would be legalized euthanasia. Moreover, once killing was explicitly sanctioned by international accord as an acceptable answer to the problem of human suffering, then the force of logic would quickly take the world down the slippery slope to an ever-widening permissiveness.
The same paradigm would operate in international biotechnology regulation. Because the world is divided about what is proper and what is not, the result would be to sanction some unethical biotechnology, cloning, for example, leading in slow motion to an eventual anything goes policy and the Brave New World.
So, by all means, let's do our best to create meaningful international regulations over biotechnology. But don't expect them to do any good until and unless the "world consensus" is willing to actually place some areas of research permanently off limits and to enforce these agreements with meaningful consequences if they are violated.
I have full confidence that we will do that--right after we save the poor people in Darfur.


5 Comments:
The Unocrat was right. You don't believe in dialog, but he was also wrong in that you only care about what you believe. You care about what is true.
(Noting CS Lewis Abolition of Man and Peter Kreeft's discussion on relativism can fill in what I will omit here, and they do far better jobs).
Can we have dialog over whether 2+2 is equal to 3, 4, or 5? Maybe the US is paying it's fair share - if we could just dialog and find a compromise arithmetic.
And I often do use this example in citing the implications of objective morality - if you purchase two items at $2 each, and hand me a $5 bill, and I refuse to give you change, you say "thief", or "fraudster", and will say you were wronged. If I say I just don't believe in arithmetic, you won't accept it - you would think me evil or insane. Yet if truth is really relative, what argument would someone have?
But to paraphrase, you believe 2+2=4 and all you care about is your belief.
That's how I see it, except that I do believe in dialogue because I want to share what I believe to be true, hopefully in a gracious, courteous, and compelling manner. I also want to hear what others say. But by dialogue he clearly meant compromise, and not making waves by not really believing in anything. And that is the problem with too many of us, it seems to me. Thanks, Thomas.
seventh layer, thanks for writing. I disagree about the USA and National Socialism. But we do have to worry about a scientocracy in which we surrender our ethics to the values of philosophical scientism.
Excuse me, but... why does it matter that you "don't believe in dialogue?" You were defending an opposing position to what has become the mainstream ideology. I thought that part of the "majority rule" was "minority right," where people who don't agree with the majority have the right to question, complain, and believe otherwise, without feeling threatened.
About the only reason I can see for people to be hostile with your position (which is also my own, and which seems to be the minority position in the mainstream) is that people feel guilty because deep down they know they're not right, and finding someone who is both knowledgable and articulate who disagrees and backs his arguments with solid evidence brings that guilt to the fore. Otherwise, why would there be so much violent opposition to our opinions?
It's hard to articulate exactly what I mean, but here's an example: People in the majority don't feel guilty about owning pets; if they meet someone who disagrees and thinks that owning pets is cruel, they acknowledge that feeling, but they don't feel particularly hostile toward people who don't share their opinions. It's only when someone from PETA or other organizations of that ilk become hostile that pet owners like myself feel hostile in return. Otherwise, we don't mind, but we don't feel guilty about having pets because deep down we don't feel there's anything criminal in it.
If euthanasia were the same way, then folks who are pro-euthanasia wouldn't feel hostile toward those who were against it because deep down they wouldn't feel any type of guilt; it would simply be a matter of opinion. Instead, we see the people in the mainstream, those in power who approve of euthanasia, acting hostile toward those of us who don't agree.
Tabs
I think it went beyond the issue of euthanasia. It was my certitude. I believed in something as a matter of principle. He found that offensive. Or to put it another way, he found me to be a unilateralist.
I think some people believe that the best way to avoid conflict is to not believe in anything other than avoiding conflict. Well, that opens the door to anything and everything, doesn't it?
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home