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Inaugural Theme : Biotechnology and Politics
2008-2010 |
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The inaugural program will focus
on the theme of Biotechnology and Politics. Steady advances
in the field of biotechnology, epitomized by the human genome
project, have opened a new frontier of ethical and political
questions.
Without doubt, gratitude is the
most appropriate response for the many developments in biotechnology
that have done much to alleviate human suffering.
At the same time, however, we
find ourselves on the threshold of an unprecedented power
to shape the character of human life itself—a “brave
new world” that brings with it a number of fundamental
questions that warrant serious and sustained examination.
Indeed, many have argued that the explicit and implicit
questions of value raised by the biotechnology revolution
constitute the most far-reaching set of challenges for our
time, outweighing even the pressing debate about war and
peace currently at the center of American politics.
“Biotechnology and Politics”
integrates two distinct types of material. The first consists
of classic texts in the history of political thought, supplemented
by classic religious and literary texts that bear directly
on the theme of the course. The second draws upon the work
of the most influential contemporary thinkers who address
the underlying ethical issues imbedded in the biotechnological
revolution. A unique aspect of this course is that it includes
campus visits and lectures by scholars
or public intellectuals who are on the cutting edge
of this debate. Students will have an opportunity to interact
with three renowned speakers in both formal and informal
ways during the course of the term:
"Science,
Philosphy, and Religion in the Embryo Debate"
Tuesday, January 26, 2010, 8 p.m. Younts Conference Center
"Choosing the Genes
of Our Children and the Future of Humankind" Tuesday,
March 16, 2010, 8 p.m., Younts Conference Center
"Stuck
with Virtue in our Pro-Life Future: The Persistence of Human
Nature in the Era of Biotechnology"
Wednesday, April 14, 2010, 8 p.m., Younts Conference Center
The course will provide students
with a brief overview of the kinds of issues raised by classic
texts in the history of political thought as they bear on
biotechnology and politics. Students will be challenged
to examine critically the often competing perspectives raised
by these authors—from Socrates’ claim that an
unexamined life is not worth living, to Bacon’s vision
of a utopia ruled by scientists, to Rousseau’s insistence
that moral improvement does not accompany scientific progress.
Against this backdrop, students will read a variety of contemporary
authors whose engagement with the revolutionary new technologies
in biology have led them to grapple with questions about
what it means to be human, as well as the relationship among
the competing authorities of science, politics and religion
in the modern world.
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Robert P. George |

Lee M. Silver
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Peter A. Lawler
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2009 Tocqueville Lecturers
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