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On Tuesday afternoon, roughly 135 scientists, bioethicists, philosophers, lawyers, and policymakers from 25 countries wrapped up the first-ever global summit to carve out a vision for what the future of biotech should — and, crucially, shouldn’t — look like.

It was an unusual venue for a gathering of the world’s preeminent scientific community: Atlanta’s big brick Tabernacle, an old Baptist church now used mostly as a music venue, and covered in swirling purple and red murals. Those attending the two-day summit — called Biotech and the Ethical Imagination, or BEINGS — were charged with a seemingly insurmountable task: to figure out practical and ethical guidelines for a lot of sticky scientific issues, such as egg donations, stem cell research, gene patents, and bioterrorism.

“Science can only pronounce definitively about things that it can measure,” Margaret Atwood, famed science fiction author and one of the event’s distinguished faculty members, told BuzzFeed News. “You’re getting people from the side of the fuzzily quantifiable values talking to the people who like to be very precise.”

That mix of people from across...