cthia
Fleet Admiral
Posts: 14951
Joined: Thu Jan 23, 2014 1:10 pm
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PeterZ wrote:runsforcelery wrote:
Couple of points.
Cthia, Leonard would not be on board with simply culling unfortunate experimental outcomes. He did subscribe to a medical philosophy which enshrined the "quality of life" argument and sometimes used it to justify euthanizing people who might not have been all on board with the idea themselves, but understand that the medical science of his day made it possible to "fix" 99.9% of the problems which would create "quality of life" issues today. That is, the problem arose less often and, most times, the person who didn't get a vote on his/her own fate was so badly damaged that voting wasn't possible. And in the case of a really badly damaged child, Leonard would sign off on termination of the fetus, but not at a later stage. If the child in question was damaged as the result of his genetic intervention (which he was damned careful about avoiding), he would have seen it as his moral responsibility to do whatever it took to repair/compensate for the damage, not simply say "Oops" and kill a child.
I trust it is sevident from that that Leonard would never have signed off on the notion of "we'll take a risk here; we can always cull little Fredrica if our genetic mod turns out not to work out." And neither would the Alignment Mike's found on Mesa. Quality of life considerations can be used --- and are, rather more ruthlessly than we use them in the US today --- to justify euthanasia for severely damaged children, which is what happened in Simoes case. However, the official deliberations of the board which recommended her death did not include any info which might even hint that the geneticists knew going in that the odds actually heavily favored exactly that outcome or that the Onion didn't care because the potential upside was worth a few dozen broken eggs . . . or culled children. So when Simoes is painted as a crackpot railing against fate and ascribing evil (in every sense of the word) motives to the medical establishment which ruled (with his wife's consent) in favor of terminating his daughter, most of the people doing that painting, many of whom belong to the Good Mesan Alignment, believe every word they're saying and that his claims that his daughter's condition (and death) were the result of the Evil Mesan Alignment are the product of his own refusal to accept reality.
The current GMA [Good Mesan Alignment] does, indeed, hold views which are much closer to the mainstream than the Onion does, but they aren't completely congruent. The GMA still has quite a bit of the Leonard Detweiller DNA in its makeup and it still believes in the systematic and systemic improvement of the race as a whole whereas the current iteration of the Beowulf Code recognizes the complete validity of correcting preventable problems and of maximizing the realization of any individual's genetic potential. And Beowulf of today would be onboard with a modern iteration of the Meyerdahl mods, although there isn't much need for one. That is, there are already existing mods which will pretty much suit you for life on any terrestrial planet out there. But specific mods like the Grayson mod for heavy metals would be totally permissible as would the elimination of any genetic predisposition towards health problems. My wife Sharon, for example, would have been corrected before birth to avoid the scoliosis which has required her to undergo seven major spinal surgeries,
Remember that although the Beowulf Code was born in a reaction (indeed, an overreaction) to the horrors of the Final War, it's been around for a long time since then. This means that much of the current Beowulf Code's animus towards genetic manipulation as part of a systematic program of "uplift" on the species level stems from exactly what the galaxy at large has seen in the Scrags and what the reader has seen in the Onion: the attitude that I am quantifiably superior to you because my genes are better than yours. There is no way to prevent individuals from feeling this way. God knows we see more than enough people in the world today who are so convinced of their own moral or intellectual superiority that no other viewpoints or voters need apply, and a group which consists of modified, "improved" humans is likely to feel this way whether they are created as individuals or as a group.
"I have a post doctorate degree and am therefore demonstrably superior to you, with your crappy little high school diploma, so you should shut up and let me drive" or "I have the moral imprimatur of a religion which is far superior to yours, so you should shut up and let me drive" or "My political ideology's aims are so high and noble that anyone who disagrees with me is obviously evil, not just wrong, so you should shut up and let me drive" is bad enough and something we see every day. But at least those idiots can't say "I am an alpha line with a quantifiably superior genotype, so shut up and let me drive."
Beowulf would sort of like to keep it that way. Even the GMA is more willing to risk the "I am superior" mindset as an unfortunate but unavoidable side effect of improving the human race as a whole. The GMA, however is far more focused on the improvement of their own families and family lines and would never dream of forcibly compelling anyone else to join their crusade.
I find myself in uncomfortable agreement with the GMA and hence likely with the Harringtons of an earlier MAlign. If the core fear of the Beowulf Code is what people may choose to do, then the Code becomes too similar to fundemental religions that compel compliance for everyone whether those impacted are adherents or not. Assuming the GMA held Leonard Detweiler's moral imperatives to treat even his genetic experiments as invaluable individuals, then those experiments in human uplift will simply change the menu of difficulties humanity will face in the future. Those experiments will not abolish current problems, simply change them. Who is Beowulf to define what problems humanity may or may not try to overcome? Even on religious grounds, I find it difficult to justify Beowulf's position. God breaths life wherever he desires to. Geneticly tailored bodies still need God's breath to spark life. So, if humanity every does overcome the challenges of the material world, then it is time to better address the moral problems that will be present so long as humans remain finite with imperfect understanding.
PeterZ wrote:runsforcelery wrote:
Couple of points.
Cthia, Leonard would not be on board with simply culling unfortunate experimental outcomes. He did subscribe to a medical philosophy which enshrined the "quality of life" argument and sometimes used it to justify euthanizing people who might not have been all on board with the idea themselves, but understand that the medical science of his day made it possible to "fix" 99.9% of the problems which would create "quality of life" issues today. That is, the problem arose less often and, most times, the person who didn't get a vote on his/her own fate was so badly damaged that voting wasn't possible. And in the case of a really badly damaged child, Leonard would sign off on termination of the fetus, but not at a later stage. If the child in question was damaged as the result of his genetic intervention (which he was damned careful about avoiding), he would have seen it as his moral responsibility to do whatever it took to repair/compensate for the damage, not simply say "Oops" and kill a child.
I trust it is sevident from that that Leonard would never have signed off on the notion of "we'll take a risk here; we can always cull little Fredrica if our genetic mod turns out not to work out." And neither would the Alignment Mike's found on Mesa. Quality of life considerations can be used --- and are, rather more ruthlessly than we use them in the US today --- to justify euthanasia for severely damaged children, which is what happened in Simoes case. However, the official deliberations of the board which recommended her death did not include any info which might even hint that the geneticists knew going in that the odds actually heavily favored exactly that outcome or that the Onion didn't care because the potential upside was worth a few dozen broken eggs . . . or culled children. So when Simoes is painted as a crackpot railing against fate and ascribing evil (in every sense of the word) motives to the medical establishment which ruled (with his wife's consent) in favor of terminating his daughter, most of the people doing that painting, many of whom belong to the Good Mesan Alignment, believe every word they're saying and that his claims that his daughter's condition (and death) were the result of the Evil Mesan Alignment are the product of his own refusal to accept reality.
The current GMA [Good Mesan Alignment] does, indeed, hold views which are much closer to the mainstream than the Onion does, but they aren't completely congruent. The GMA still has quite a bit of the Leonard Detweiller DNA in its makeup and it still believes in the systematic and systemic improvement of the race as a whole whereas the current iteration of the Beowulf Code recognizes the complete validity of correcting preventable problems and of maximizing the realization of any individual's genetic potential. And Beowulf of today would be onboard with a modern iteration of the Meyerdahl mods, although there isn't much need for one. That is, there are already existing mods which will pretty much suit you for life on any terrestrial planet out there. But specific mods like the Grayson mod for heavy metals would be totally permissible as would the elimination of any genetic predisposition towards health problems. My wife Sharon, for example, would have been corrected before birth to avoid the scoliosis which has required her to undergo seven major spinal surgeries,
Remember that although the Beowulf Code was born in a reaction (indeed, an overreaction) to the horrors of the Final War, it's been around for a long time since then. This means that much of the current Beowulf Code's animus towards genetic manipulation as part of a systematic program of "uplift" on the species level stems from exactly what the galaxy at large has seen in the Scrags and what the reader has seen in the Onion: the attitude that I am quantifiably superior to you because my genes are better than yours. There is no way to prevent individuals from feeling this way. God knows we see more than enough people in the world today who are so convinced of their own moral or intellectual superiority that no other viewpoints or voters need apply, and a group which consists of modified, "improved" humans is likely to feel this way whether they are created as individuals or as a group.
"I have a post doctorate degree and am therefore demonstrably superior to you, with your crappy little high school diploma, so you should shut up and let me drive" or "I have the moral imprimatur of a religion which is far superior to yours, so you should shut up and let me drive" or "My political ideology's aims are so high and noble that anyone who disagrees with me is obviously evil, not just wrong, so you should shut up and let me drive" is bad enough and something we see every day. But at least those idiots can't say "I am an alpha line with a quantifiably superior genotype, so shut up and let me drive."
Beowulf would sort of like to keep it that way. Even the GMA is more willing to risk the "I am superior" mindset as an unfortunate but unavoidable side effect of improving the human race as a whole. The GMA, however is far more focused on the improvement of their own families and family lines and would never dream of forcibly compelling anyone else to join their crusade.
I find myself in uncomfortable agreement with the GMA and hence likely with the Harringtons of an earlier MAlign. If the core fear of the Beowulf Code is what people may choose to do, then the Code becomes too similar to fundemental religions that compel compliance for everyone whether those impacted are adherents or not. Assuming the GMA held Leonard Detweiler's moral imperatives to treat even his genetic experiments as invaluable individuals, then those experiments in human uplift will simply change the menu of difficulties humanity will face in the future. Those experiments will not abolish current problems, simply change them. Who is Beowulf to define what problems humanity may or may not try to overcome? Even on religious grounds, I find it difficult to justify Beowulf's position. God breaths life wherever he desires to. Geneticly tailored bodies still need God's breath to spark life. So, if humanity every does overcome the challenges of the material world, then it is time to better address the moral problems that will be present so long as humans remain finite with imperfect understanding.
Perhaps. Albeit, playing the moral card in defense of the atrocities visited upon the Darius system is a bit much. Who is Beowulf to decide? They are the entity who had to clean up the mess and save civilization when the first catastrophic error in judgement visited mankind, expressly delivered by that ever-present Demon Murphy. Thus, they would know, and know intimately, just how close humanity came to extinction. And they, because of their knowledge in the field, know exactly how thin the ice is that is being treaded and that they may not have the "cure" the next time. Who thinks that Beowulf would have an easy time of righting any wrongs caused by the Alignment's research gone awry? Beowulf would probably be completely lost and out of sorts without the Alignment's notes and research. Who thinks that that research would be forthcoming from the Alignment? Who thinks Beowulf, if even given the research, could catch up fast enough to clean up? All and all an interesting stance Peter. Though the notion of religion might be splitting the hairs and parsing the logic a bit much. If I understand you correctly.
Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense
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