Nano Ethics and the Future
The futuristic dimensions of nanotech along with nanobiotech
lead us to project scenarios and then evaluate them according to ethical
criteria. Techno futurists operate according to what I call the understanding-decision-control
(u-d-c) formula. The first task is to understand the direction current
trends are taking us. In this case, we need to project the possible future
scenarios nano research will bring about. Such understanding includes
distinguishing between desirable and undesirable futures. This is where ethical
deliberation helps us distinguish what we should pursue, what we should avoid,
and where to urge caution. The second task is decision - that is, we make the
decision now to pursue the technological scenario most likely leading to the most
desirable future. The third task is to take control of what is projected to
happen, in order to aid and abet a positive future becoming actualized.
Control, of course, can be an elusive phantom; yet making decisions in pursuit
of control is intrinsic to future planning.
The basic contribution an ethicist can make belongs
at stage one, envisioning a better future and setting the moral criteria for
determining what counts as a better future. A second contribution is to urge
caution where caution is warranted. Nano speculation is rife with wild-eyed and
enticing scenarios, especially for medical therapy and human enhancement. So we
need to ask: what counts ethically as we compare various scenarios? The field of
nano ethics today sees its task as shouldering moral responsibility for what
should happen tomorrow.
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| Contributed by: Ted Peters
|