NEVER LET ME GO - ASPECTS OF HUMAN INSTRUMENTALISATION IN BIOTECHNOLOGICAL PRACTICES Cover Image

NEVER LET ME GO - ASPECTS OF HUMAN INSTRUMENTALISATION IN BIOTECHNOLOGICAL PRACTICES
NEVER LET ME GO - ASPECTS OF HUMAN INSTRUMENTALISATION IN BIOTECHNOLOGICAL PRACTICES

Author(s): Gergana Popova
Subject(s): Anthropology, Ethics / Practical Philosophy, Sociology
Published by: University of Tetova
Keywords: instrumentalisation; gene editing; human autonomy; biotechnologies

Summary/Abstract: The article examines Jürgen Habermas’s text: The Future of Human Nature, focused on the implications of the development of biotechnological practices such as preimplantation genetic diagnostics and the possibilities of embryo modeling. Habermas’ thesis that the uncontrolled use of the mentioned practices creates a danger of possible instrumentalisation of man and the creation of relations of dependence between different groups of people is analyzed. In such a perspective, the report centers around Nobel Laureate Kazuo Ishiguro’s novel Never Let Me Go as an illustration of a possible future in which technology will allow the creation of human clones used as a source of spare parts. Various examples of such instrumentalisation of the human body in the last two decades are also given - surrogate motherhood, the egg market and even the case in which parents created a child to save the life of his/ sister through a bone marrow transplant. These already available instances of instrumentalisation of the human are pointed out in order to question the anthropological consequences of the advancement of biotechnology and its almost unchallenged imposition as a form of scientific progress that will lead to the improvement of the humankind but perhaps it will rather mark its end.

  • Issue Year: 10/2023
  • Issue No: 19-20
  • Page Range: 78 - 82
  • Page Count: 5
  • Language: English