Truly Human Enhancement by Nicholas Agar and Humanity Enhanced by Russell Blackford – Reviews
By Steven Rose,
The Guardian
| 06. 19. 2014
Untitled Document
Fantasies of human enhancement have a long history, from early myths about supernormal strength and eternal life to 20th-century comic superheroes: Superman, Batman, Spider-Man and their many emulators. While early attempts to achieve superpowers in real life – from shouldering artificial wings to injecting monkey glands – generally ended in disaster, today's advances in genetics and neuroscience seem to bring them closer to practical possibility. So much so that speculations about such prospects and their ethical implications have migrated from the imaginations of SF writers to the minds of philosophers and bioethicists.
The grainier issues raised by current or near-at-hand developments, from three-parent families and designer babies to smart drugs, are in danger of becoming submerged by this welter of speculation. A scholarly cult of so-called transhumanists has arisen. Their prophet is US futurologist and Google engineering director Ray Kurzweil, who argues that so rapid have been developments in the biosciences and informatics that by the mid-century a "singularity" will result through which a genetically engineered and neurally enhanced post-human species will emerge, incomparably stronger, wiser, more moral and...
Related Articles
By Jason Liebowitz, The New Yorker | 03.06.2026
When Talaya Reid was in high school, in a quiet suburb of Philadelphia, she developed fatigue so severe that she spent afternoons napping instead of going out with friends. She was lethargic at school and her grades suffered, but after...
By Tania Fabo, Truthout | 02.28.2026
The reproductive tech company Orchid recently launched a genetic test that promises a whole genome sequencing report for embryos. It is the first such test commercially available to couples undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF) and claims to detect things like...
By Émile P. Torres, Truthdig | 02.26.2026
It’s well known that Jeffrey Epstein was a super-wealthy pedophile with an extraordinary network of powerful friends: tech billionaires, politicians and academics. But few people know that he was also a transhumanist — someone who believes that we should...
By Pete Shanks
| 02.27.2026
Last month, we published “The Shameful Legacy of Tuskegee” which focused on a proposed experiment in Guinea-Bissau. The study’s plan echoed the notorious Tuskegee disaster, withholding safe, effective vaccines against hepatitis B from some newborns while inoculating others. It was to be financed by the U.S. but performed by a controversial Danish team. That project provoked a multi-national outcry, leading to a remarkable response from the World Health Organization:
WHO has significant concerns regarding the study’s scientific...