Tuesday, March 2, 2010
Entering the Conversation
Sunday, February 21, 2010
Frame that embryo/Literary Economics
Like several of my classmates, I wondered why the group of sociologists who penned Human Embryos as boundary objects? had felt the need to meticulously construct what appears on the surface to be a slam-dunk argument: that "affected" (rejected) embryos from PGD laboratories could and should be made available for use in ESC research projects. After all, ESC scientists would only be "taking material that's going to be destroyed and... trying to create therapies out of that" (9). Here is where we can really see Green's analyses of the volatile and deeply inconsistent politicization of embroys in Embryo as epiphenomenon working to help us better understand the religio-cultural terrain of the debate. Many conservatives overlook the destruction of human embryos that occur as part of the IVF process, while they bemoan the use of such 'doomed' embryos in stem-cell research; in short, "opposing those who would privilege scientific progress and individual choice over the sanctity of family life and traditional family roles" (841). The reasons underlying the dichotomy- and some would add, the hypocrisy- of "pro-life" outrage are more likely to be discovered from a religio-cultural framing of the debate, by allowing for what Green calls the "deeper value conflicts," than from a more academic bioethical framing.
* * * * *
Few things written on the backs of album covers* have struck me as profoundly as this sentence: "Art is a science having more than seven variables." Maybe Fortun is proposing that we improve upon the disclosure mechanisms of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission by reconsidering the administration of the economic system as an art rather than as a science. Leaning heavily on the writing of Charles Kindleberger, he offers this:
"To describe what governments or banks must do to respond well to speculative excess... a 'neat trick' has to be performed, a 'sleight of hand' [whereby] the 'lender of last resort'- who must exist, but whose 'presence should be doubted'- must 'always come to the rescue... but always leave it uncertain whether rescue will arrive in time or at all, so as to instill caution in other speculators, banks, cities, or countries' "(194).
This theory of "literary economics," which I'm pretty sure even Fortun would agree is half-baked as it appears in his book, is nonetheless intriguing. How would a USCEC (my acronym) based on a chiasmic, doubtfulXcertain "foundation without foundation" model actually function? And what the hell is the model, anyway? This is some serious voodoo economics.
*A notable exception, which I'm sharing just for fun, can be found at the very end of the liner notes in Lou Reed's Metal Machine Music: "My week beats your year." Go get em, Lou.
Monday, February 15, 2010
Let's Keep the Punches Above the Belt, People
I appreciated the "cultureXreligion in flux" analysis of Epiphenomenon, as well as Devolder & Harris' rhetorical passion (ire?). Reading through these papers, however, I quickly realized how so many religious people could resent the attitudes of scientists and bioethicists, specifically in reference to the stem cell debate. While I agree with most of the points these two articles forward, both articles somewhat misrepresent one of the main arguments against allowing scientific research that utilizes human embryos: namely, that it is wrong to destroy a human blastocyst. Green seems to twist this argument to mean that it is likewise morally wrong to NOT rescue every embryo possible, regardless of the reason for "arrest":
"[I]t has long been known that there is an extremely high rate of embryo loss associated with conception and pregnancy... at least half of all fertilised human ova arrest somewhere in early development... [T]his amounts to the catastrophic loss of perhaps a hundred million "human" lives worldwide each year. Yet no one in the global health establishment of a US administration has ever proposed devoting significant research funding to address this problem" (840).
Condoning the dissection and destruction of human embryos in laboratories is one thing; allowing the natural mechanisms of intrauterine embryonic implantation and arrest to take their course is quite another. It only weakens Green's position to confuse the two. Devolder & Harris take a similar straw-manning stance:
"IVF could... be combined with the possibility to grow embryos to term in artificial wombs, which, when perfected will offer a safer environment for the embryo than a woman's womb... Would "pro-lifers" support these technologies? It looks as though there would indeed be a strong moral obligation to abandon sexual procreation and use only embryo-sparing ART (assisted reproduction technologies)" (163).
Unsurprisingly, it wasn't hard to notice a palpable contempt for the religious 'right to life' perspective in these papers, particularly in one passage of Ambiguity, where Devolder & Harris skewer conservative's use of the 'pro-life' moniker:
"We say inappropriately termed "pro-life" because those who regard themselves as "pro-life" so often support positions that can only be thought of as anti-life and that moreover are profligate of human life and safety" (163).
Apart from the fallacious logic of the first two passages, I found both articles solidly well-reasoned. The stab at the ridiculousness of the title "pro-life" only made me smile.
Monday, February 8, 2010
Intoxication of the Promise
Friday, February 5, 2010
The Heart
~ Does technology dehumanize us?
~ Is technology evil? Or just how we use it?
~ Are we now forever dependent on our technology?
~ What does that make of us?"
