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Technoprogressive? BioConservative? Huh?
Quick overview of biopolitical points of view


whats new at ieet
Design Outside the Box

Online Games, Super Empowerment, and a Better World

Are You There, Dog? It’s Me, Gordon.

Where Next for the Space Program?

History is Contingent, Built on Flukes, Accidents, and Surprises

Compassion

What Would You Say?

Teaching Theories

Geoengineering: Global Salvation or Ruin?

George Grant and Transhumanism


comments

postfuturist on 'IEET Readers See China as Future Power' (Mar 18, 2010)

postfuturist on 'Health Care Good, System Bad' (Mar 18, 2010)

Sara on 'Organization and Information at the Bedside (dissertation)' (Mar 18, 2010)

Omar Fink on 'Health Care Good, System Bad' (Mar 18, 2010)

Judith Light Feather on 'What Would You Say?' (Mar 18, 2010)







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Also check out technoprogressive multimedia on Thoughtware.tv

IHEU- Appignani Humanist Center for Bioethics and
Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies present

Human Rights for the 21st Century
Rights of the Person to Technological Self-Determination

May 11-13, 2007
New York City




Speaker

Linda MacDonald Glenn, J.D., LL.M.

Women’s Bioethics Project

Linda MacDonald Glenn is a bioethicist, healthcare educator, lecturer, consultant and attorney. Her extensive experience and passion for the issues facing the legal, nursing, and healthcare professions make her a compelling and thought-provoking lecturer. Linda maintains an ongoing blog (http://www.womensbioethics.blogspot.com) as a Women’s Bioethics Project Scholar.

Technological challenges to the ideas of human identity Listen to talk here

From genetic engineering to implantable brain chips, from nanobots to artificial intelligence, we may be taking the next step in our own evolution.  The convergence of Nanotechnology, Biotechnology, Information technology, and Cognitive neuroscience, promises the recipients of such advancements revolutionary betterment heretofore unknown to mankind and will challenge traditional notions of what it means be to be human or what it means to be a person.

Traditionally, the law has divided entities into a clear cut dichotomy: either persons or property.  And, one would think that one had to be human to be a person—the difficulty arises, however, when one looks back at the history of the law and realizes that women, children, and slaves were once considered as mere property under the law. Yet non-human entities such as corporations, municipalities, and even ships were declared to be ‘persons’ under the law.  But the law has begun to evolve to recognize categories that fall somewhere in between property and personhood, creating a continuum, rather than a dichotomy.  There are three areas where traditional legal notions of personhood will be challenged:  1.) Human-machine mergers, 2.) intelligent transgenic or chimeric creatures, and 3) advances in fetal viability.  A continuum approach can give a different tool with which to work and a different perspective than the traditional black-and –white personhood –property dichotomy offers.  More importantly, it opens up discussions about our humanity and our humaneness, as well as our relationship and moral and legal obligations to other sentient beings, especially those of our own creation.

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Contact: Executive Director, Dr. James J. Hughes,
Williams 229B, Trinity College, 300 Summit St., Hartford CT 06106 USA 
Email: director @ ieet.org     phone: 860-297-2376