Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Genetic testing, an informed choice
- 3 Sex selection: sorting sperm as a gateway to the sorting society?
- 4 Cloning to avoid genetic disease
- 5 Procreative Beneficence: reasons to not have disabled children
- 6 Reprogenetic technologies: balancing parental procreative autonomy and social equity and justice
- 7 Genetic technology and intergenerational justice
- 8 Genetic preselection and the moral equality of individuals
- 9 Genes, identity and the ‘expressivist critique’
- 10 Overstating the biological: geneticism and essentialism in social cloning and social sex selection
- 11 The sorting society: a legal perspective
- Index
7 - Genetic technology and intergenerational justice
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Genetic testing, an informed choice
- 3 Sex selection: sorting sperm as a gateway to the sorting society?
- 4 Cloning to avoid genetic disease
- 5 Procreative Beneficence: reasons to not have disabled children
- 6 Reprogenetic technologies: balancing parental procreative autonomy and social equity and justice
- 7 Genetic technology and intergenerational justice
- 8 Genetic preselection and the moral equality of individuals
- 9 Genes, identity and the ‘expressivist critique’
- 10 Overstating the biological: geneticism and essentialism in social cloning and social sex selection
- 11 The sorting society: a legal perspective
- Index
Summary
The deeds of present generations create favourable or unfavourable conditions for people not yet born. But our actions not only affect what they will experience in the future. We also make those who will have experiences, and we shape their capacities for thought and action. Genetic technology provides an ever-increasing power to determine what their nature and capacities will be. In discussions about the ethical implications of genetic technology and the restrictions that ought to be placed on research and application, philosophers have mostly worried about the impact of the technology on individuals. They have considered whether and how particular techniques would violate rights or have an adverse effect on the wellbeing or autonomy of individuals. In this chapter I will focus on the impact of genetic technology on intergenerational relationships. My aim is to determine whether these techniques, now or in the future, could create intergenerational injustices.
Generations and justice
In discussions of intergenerational justice several senses of generation come into play. In a family, those who count as members of the same generation are defined by their relation to their parents or by their position in a family tree. In a social sense, a generation is a group of individuals whose births fall within specified dates and who move through life together. How we set the parameters is an arbitrary matter.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Sorting SocietyThe Ethics of Genetic Screening and Therapy, pp. 85 - 98Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008
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