
This past weekend I had the opportunity to attend and speak at the
Human Enhancement Technologies and Human Rights (HETHR) conference at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California. The conference, which was sponsored by the
Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies (IEET), the
Center for Cognitive Liberty and Ethics (CCLE), and the
Stanford Law School (SLC),
brought together a diverse array of thinkers who spent the weekend
ruminating over the challenging issues surrounding human enhancement.
The
central focus of the conference was to construct a case for human
enhancement based upon the lofty principles of human rights, liberalism
and bodily autonomy. The event was in no small way a direct challenge
to the burgeoning anti-enhancement camp that has arisen in recent years
to combat what is perceived to be a threat to human dignity and
humanity itself. Organizers of HETHR hoped that the conference would
demonstrate that a viable and compelling case could be made in favour
of enhancement. Based on what I heard at the event, I would say it was
mission accomplished.
First, the caliber and credentials of the
speakers was excellent – one of the strongest set of panels and
panelists I've yet seen at such a conference. Attendees and speakers
came from as far away as Australia and Europe and were comprised of
academics, activists, journalists and the curious. And tellingly, the
conference crowd was a fair mixture of men and women, young and old,
and included some visible minorities – a far cry from the young white
male crowd that came to dominate similar events only a few years ago.
Second,
the arguments and legal frameworks supporting the issue of
biotechnological enhancement are most certainly beginning to
crystallize and take root. The human enhancement debate is in the
process of maturing – a development that will end with the
normalization of enhancement discourse in bioethics circles and
eventually within society itself. As evident throughout the conference,
the ethical and legal frameworks necessary to uphold human rights and
enable the responsible development and application of enhancement
technologies are very much under construction.

Such
a conference would have been unlikely only a few years ago. Quite
obviously, issues surrounding changes to human reproduction, morphology
and cognition are highly contentious -- a swarm of sensitive issues
that has thrown traditional left-right politics completely off kilter.
As
Reason science correspondent
Ronald Bailey noted during his presentation, our pending transition to a self-modifying species will be
the key political issue of the 21st century.
But while the HETHR conference was a definite step forward, it almost never happened.
Just
prior to the event word got out to the Stanford brass that an
enhancement themed conference was to be held at the Law School. They
reacted by trying to shut it down. I suspect that the Stanford folk
were not only wary of a potential 'crank' factor (the Singularity Summit was similarly unjustly singled out two weeks prior), but of the sensitive subject matter as well.
But it was through the diligent and persuasive lobbying of conference organizer Henry Greely,
the director of the Stanford Center for Law and the Biosciences, that
the conference was allowed to continue. Techprogressives can be
thankful that it did, as a cancelled conference would have been a
decisive victory for the bioconservative camp. Correction:
I've been receiving responses from people involved and it looks like
this was never the case. Both the Singularity Summit and HETHR
conference, it seems, were never in any real danger of being cancelled,
but they both faced tougher than ususal scrutiny.
Clearly affected
by the hard struggle to keep the conference alive, Greely’s
introductory talk was a plea for people to remain open-minded and to
respect the freedom of academic discourse no matter how controversial
the subject matter might initially appear to be.
Once the
conference got underway it was obvious that the participants took heed
of Greely's words. What followed over the course of the weekend was a
spirited and tolerant atmosphere in which attendees did not have to
feel shackled by stifling political correctness, established ethical
and philosophical conventions, or constraining visions of the future.

Moreover,
by giving the three key sponsors an equal opportunity to mould the
event, HETHR never came to be dominated by any one set of priorities or
visions. For example, members of the IEET, a techprogressive think-tank
run by bioethicist and HETHR organizer
James Hughes,
provided the decidedly future-tech perspective. This angle was tempered
by the groundedness of the Law School and by the activistic and
socially hip work of the CCLE -- a group directed by the charismatic
duo of
Wrye Sententia and
Richard Boire.
Consequently, the presentations were in tune with some of the more
profound implications of pending biotechnologies (e.g. radically
extended lives, AI, virtual persons, animal uplift, etc.), while
intermixed with the practical realities of law, politics and civil
rights.
The conference, then, was never dominated by the
technorapturesque mood that has come to characterize similiar events.
It was truly a conference for ethicists by ethicists – many of whom
were openly critical and frustrated with their own departments and with
what they have come to perceive as the unrealistic and flawed
bioconservative streak that comprises a significant part of mainstream
bioethics today.
Indeed, the conference itself was an amazing
showcase for ethical discourse. Panelists reached deep into their
methodological tool kits to find support for their various cases; names
that consistently rang out throughout the conference included Plato,
Aristotle, Socrates, Aquinas, Kant, Locke, Rawls and Singer. Key
ethical concepts and concerns that were regularly tossed into the fray
included issues of egalitarianism, utilitarianism, contractarianism,
cultural relativism and even Buddhism and transhumanism. Debates
centered around issues of primary versus positional goods, therapy
versus enhancement, identity and authenticity, what it means to be
'normal', liberty, justice and human rights itself. Even those
ethicists critical of human enhancement, including
William Hurlbut and
Nigel Cameron,
refrained from regressing to tired conservative and religious
arguments, instead opting to directly challenge and critique the
various pro-enhancement positions; it was dialog rather than shouting,
debate rather than hysteria.

Among the many highlights of the conference, a poignant moment came during
Walter Truett Anderson's
presentation. Anderson, a forward thinking enviro-realist, reminded the
audience that as we stand at the eve of human enhancement the body is
still a system that operates within a larger system. Part of the coming
challenge, he argued, is to look at human enhancement in the context of
the environment and the planet itself.
At the same time, however, Anderson also issued a challenge to traditional environmentalists. Quoting environmentalist pioneer
George Perkins Marsh,
he noted that "humans change things.” This observation, he said, is
very much a part of the human condition. It's a lesson that Anderson
believes most environmentalists have yet to learn. In this increasingly
networked age, and as the planet becomes progressively wired along with
it, environmentalists must realize that humanity cannot enforce a
hand's off policy with regards to the planet. Whatever environmental
aspect is altered and managed on Earth, it will be the result of our
guiding hands. Such changes will be indistinguishable from what we
consider to be 'natural' today. Anderson declared that we are poised to
deliver the planet into its next phase of evolution.
The
analogy to human enhancement and our increasing control over the 'human
system' was not lost on the audience. Indeed, contrary to what many
bioethicists would have, we cannot expect to exert a hand's off policy
to the human body. Yes, humans change things. They change the
environment. They will change themselves.
Like our approach to
the environment, the changes that we will make to ourselves will
eventually prove to be both desirable and necessary. And like the
future of Earth, it will represent the next phase in our own evolution.
In
the meantime, conferences like HETHR will serve as the sounding boards
and springboards to a prosperous, fulfilling and dignified future for
all.
<span style="font-style:italic;">Cross-posted from <a
href="http://sentientdevelopments.blogspot.com/">Sentient
Developments</a>.</span>