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should you own your own genetics?

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OneTrikPony OneTrikPony's picture
should you own your own genetics?
Should you be able to own your unique genetic code? If I own my genetics does that mean she has to pay me license fees on her baby? I can totally see this being law in PC space and thats what makes the Consortium Awesome! :-D

Mea Culpa: My mode of speech can make others feel uninvited to argue or participate. This is the EXACT opposite of what I intend when I post.

Leng Plateau Leng Plateau's picture
Interesting question
My inclination is yes you do... but... there's pretty firm historical precedent that haploid donation during consentual coitus cedes those rights to the duploid chimera which results and as such questions of natural life support are ceded to the incubating contributor (though that might be negotiable given exowomb technologies). Though a case could probably be made for cases where one's genetic material is acquired through nonconsentual means. I think your viewpoint on law would be more defensible in extropian habs.
At least with Lovecraft, nobody pretends the gods are nice. And wherever you end up, there is guaranteed to be tentacles.
OneTrikPony OneTrikPony's picture
On an extropian hab wouldn't
On an extropian hab wouldn't you need individual contracts with everyone to assert your claim? Aside from certain laws or severe poverty today accidental conception is nearly imposssible. Considering that, am I relinquishing my ownership of my genetics every time i nut? What aboutt if i sneeze then throw the tissue in the trash? Whats the difference?

Mea Culpa: My mode of speech can make others feel uninvited to argue or participate. This is the EXACT opposite of what I intend when I post.

Leng Plateau Leng Plateau's picture
Fair point on extropia but...
Precedent again I'd think with the nose blowing example. In that case (or with discarded skin and suchlike) there's no assumed intent to consent to genetic contribution I'd think. Though, that said, would how you're thinking give your parents full rights over your genetic code? By extension under Planetary Consortium law would a child be automatically indentured to their haploid donors until such a time as they pay off the license fee?
At least with Lovecraft, nobody pretends the gods are nice. And wherever you end up, there is guaranteed to be tentacles.
ORCACommander ORCACommander's picture
If i understand correctly
If i understand correctly your genetic code is your property and your person at the same time which is why there are so many legal forms concerning it and why warrants are required for non voluntary DNA tests/archiving within the united states. If i also recall currently human dna can not be patenteted at the moment like crops or live stock as for the reelase of your ownership during sex? well if it results in conception it is not your dna any more. it is now an entirely different sequence since only 50% of your code is used in its production. Its like me using a dozen differentiated patented gears to make a new product
OneTrikPony OneTrikPony's picture
"assumed intent to consent to
"assumed intent to consent to genetic contribution." If I wear a condom is my concent still assumed? Why? If someone clones me from my snotty tissue a third party will then own all of my biometrics; dna, fingerprints, retinal pattern... The Myriad genetics case was a good decision; writen by clarence thomas no less! While I am happy that myriad cant pattent my genes and then sue me. I wonder if I shouldnt be able to sue or licence my unique genes if they're stolen or valuable. A child's genetic code is not an entirely new code. I think a beter analogy would be pirating lines of code or plagarism. Also pattents might not apply as much as trademark. (I dont actually know.)

Mea Culpa: My mode of speech can make others feel uninvited to argue or participate. This is the EXACT opposite of what I intend when I post.

Leng Plateau Leng Plateau's picture
If your genetic pattern can't
If your genetic pattern can't be patented then that does rather end the issue. Though to address your condom question, according to the CDC condoms fail 12% of the time (http://www.cdc.gov/reproductivehealth/unintendedpregnancy/contraception.htm) so yes, your consent would still have to be assumed in this day and age. Your tissue argument really doesn't relate to the point.
At least with Lovecraft, nobody pretends the gods are nice. And wherever you end up, there is guaranteed to be tentacles.
Leng Plateau Leng Plateau's picture
I should ask now
Is where you're going with this "paper abortion" and/or compelling the termination of a pregnancy based on genetic license claim?
At least with Lovecraft, nobody pretends the gods are nice. And wherever you end up, there is guaranteed to be tentacles.
OneTrikPony OneTrikPony's picture
I don't know what paper
I don't know what paper abortion is and the first ten google hits aren't links I'm going to click. If a paper abortion gives a man power to avoid the man trap or gold digger and owning his genetics gives a man access to a paper abortion then that *is* what I'm going for... partly. What I'm thinking... Idk really. I want to own my genetics. I do not want myriad or the gubmint to own my genetics. I wouldn't mind if my parents owned my genetics as long as my specific sequence was given to me at the age of majority. Similarly if i were a clone I'd probably be ok with shares in what ever value my code could bring. If I were sucessful rich or special in some way that made my genetics valuable reproductive rights would be a serious issue for me. I think that "stolen" genetic material will be a serious issue in the near future. Actuually; I'm in utah, while it isnt a personal problem, using pregnancy to coerce marriage is an actual thing in this culture.

Mea Culpa: My mode of speech can make others feel uninvited to argue or participate. This is the EXACT opposite of what I intend when I post.

Aldrich Aldrich's picture
What?
I feel like we've skipped a fundamental part of the question. What is even being "owned" here? You have property rights over your own body (in the real world, as well as in EP assuming you own your morph), but in the real world "ownership" of the informational content of genetics makes little sense, as they're naturally occurring - it would be like trying to "own" the thermal gradient that results in the weather. You start to have a case once the information is used to produce something tangible, as in morph design and production, or real world pharmaceuticals. But that degrades into a melee about intellectual property in general. I don't have a terribly strong stance on the matter, but for what it's worth US Supreme Court has ruled that you can't patent DNA sequences, or more precisely, "that merely isolating genes that are found in nature does not make them patentable". You can patent a *process* to extract them, or to build something using them, but not the information itself. And as to discarded bodily fluids? I would say no, you don't own those, or the information contained within. The legal protection you're afforded applies to your property - a creeper can't attack you and forcibly take a genetic sample, they can't break into your house and dig through the trash can next to your desk. But the skin flakes you left on the coffee shop table when you scratched your chin? Fair game. Edit: Woo! Utah. I grew up there and it is indeed a silly place. I was going to comment on the whole "marriage coercion" thing, but I realized it rapidly boiled down to a debate about abortion, which is only tangential to the conversation about owning genetic information, so I'll refrain for now.
OneTrikPony OneTrikPony's picture
I'm thinking that the
I'm thinking that the apropriate analogy is software. Of course you can't own the characters in a line of code but you can own the assembled code. The SC specificly excluded synthetic genetics in the decision. Thomase's opinion only applies to "naturally ocuring" genes as un pattentable. that opens a can of worms and begs the question; wbat is naturally occuring? Monsanto can still pattent it seed but a rancher who has spent generations breeding a $200000 bull has no protections? An actor or athlete has no protections when some company steals his genetics to sell toparrents who want to buildababy? That same actor has no protections from a woman who wants a million dollar child support suit. I also find the idea that casual sex is explicit consent for procreation just ludicrous. The truth is the oposite the law should reflect the truth.

Mea Culpa: My mode of speech can make others feel uninvited to argue or participate. This is the EXACT opposite of what I intend when I post.

Leng Plateau Leng Plateau's picture
I'm stepping away from this
Thank you for the answer on your intent. This is ground well-tread elsewhere and I'm not going to engage it here as it goes to very unpleasant places. Thank you for being clear with your motivations at least.
At least with Lovecraft, nobody pretends the gods are nice. And wherever you end up, there is guaranteed to be tentacles.
DivineWrath DivineWrath's picture
The general purpose of
The general purpose of patents and copyrights is to encourage further development of stuff and the development of new things. The new stuff and further development is what is valuable to society, not the cash cow system you are probably thinking of. Patents and copyrights exist to allow creators to have certain protections to encourage further development of these things, giving them the government given right to deny anyone from using the stuff they developed. Generally, creators can make deals where they get paid in exchange for granting privileges to others to use their ideas. Without it, creators would spend resources to develop new things, but then everyone else could use the idea right away. Without the control over new ideas, creators would have to fight recoup spent resources while those good at producing things would be able to start production without spending the resources needed to create an idea (and probably out compete the creators). In such a circumstance, the best decision one could make in business would be a producer, not a creator, thus creating intellectual stagnation, hence the need for patents. Naturally, to prevent patents from becoming cash cows, patents and copyrights are designed to expire over time. If I recall correctly, US patents expire after 20 years (I forget what it is for copyrights). If you don't improve it or make the next best thing, you will lose your advantage. Part of the patent process involves documentation. Good documentation makes supporting your legal control over the patent stronger, and once the patent expires the documentation is useful to all. You also need to show that the idea is actually and is not an idea that one could easily come up with. For instance, you can't patent a toaster (because it isn't new), nor could you patent a 4 slot after seeing a 2 slot toaster (because that is an easy idea to come up with). However, a teleporter could be patented if one could figure out how to make one. ---- So no, genetics is poor grounds for copyrights. None of what was evolved can be copyrighted because no human actually created the stuff, and its been around for a long time. If you could somehow prove that you created some new DNA that actual did something new, then maybe. Anything involving reproduction is tricky because sex is going to happen (its not something you can really stop), which may or may not violate patents and stuff. I need to look up some stuff before I comment further (depends if I get some free time soon).
ORCACommander ORCACommander's picture
copyrights are currently
copyrights are currently thanks to disney and other multimedia conglomerates about 200 to 250 years. it used to be 25 years then 50 years and now it is just obscene
Aldrich Aldrich's picture
I very strongly disagree.
OneTrikPony wrote:
I also find the idea that casual sex is explicit consent for procreation just ludicrous. The truth is the oposite the law should reflect the truth.
I very strongly disagree. I don't want to put words in your mouth, but it seems like you are strongly implying that men require a legal recourse to either avoid maternal support or compel an abortion in the event of an undesired pregnancy, under the premise of "protecting your genetic information". There are several different ways this stance is flawed: To start with the most serious problem (compelling an abortion), the issue is one of force. After conception (intended or not) the pregnancy is the sole domain of the woman, it is a biological process that is literally occurring inside her body. To force a woman to undergo an abortion against her will is literally physical and psychological assault and battery. The immorality of compelling action via force is a fundamental tenant of my worldview and I don't want to take the space to justify it here, but if you disagree let me know why and I'm open to discussing it. Second, every sex act, including those where contraception is used, involves a statistically significant chance (risk) of pregnancy. In engaging in the act, you are explicitly choosing to take this risk and deal with the consequences involved. Both participants have to accept this risk in full, or the sex was actually rape. This is why statutory rape laws exist - minors are (on average) incapable of fully evaluating this risk and its potential consequences, so they cannot consent to the risk. Further, choosing to take the risk but demanding that the unfavorable outcome not apply to you is also unethical. You can't buy a lottery ticket and demand a refund when you lose! Lastly, if the outcome is a child, then you have a moral duty to the child - not the woman (though the woman also has a duty to the child). Another way of putting that is that the child has the right to not be harmed through your neglect. This right is inherent to being a child: children are incapable of providing for themselves and only came into existence through your actions (intended or not). In your hypothetical scenario:
OneTrikPony wrote:
An actor or athlete has no protections when some company steals his genetics to sell toparrents who want to buildababy? That same actor has no protections from a woman who wants a million dollar child support suit.
The actor would never have a duty to the child, because the actor took no *action* (heh) to create the child. The current legal system accomplishes this just fine. But now I feel like I'm justifying why child abuse through neglect is immoral, and the need for *that* is indeed just ludicrous.
OneTrikPony OneTrikPony's picture
I am not advocating abortion;
I am not advocating abortion; excepting the caveat that I dont really understand what a "paper abortion" is, and the morning after pill isn't an abortion. So if I undersand correctly, most people here agree with the recent desision of a kansas judge that a sperm donor is responcible for child suport?

Mea Culpa: My mode of speech can make others feel uninvited to argue or participate. This is the EXACT opposite of what I intend when I post.

ORCACommander ORCACommander's picture
No way in Hell is he
No way in Hell is he responsible if that was the terms of the contract.
Aldrich Aldrich's picture
Cool.
OneTrikPony wrote:
I am not advocating abortion; excepting the caveat that I dont really understand what a "paper abortion" is, and the morning after pill isn't an abortion.
Cool. Sorry for the misunderstanding. I hadn't heard the term before either, so I looked it up: a "paper abortion" is a hypothetical legal option in which a man could legally discharge his paternal rights and responsibilities before the child is born. I guess the idea is supposed to be some sort of male counterpart to the woman's ability to choose a physical abortion. I don't like it - the whole thing smacks of legalized abandonment and seems like a blatant attempt to avoid dealing with the consequences of a risky behavior. The only place I see it mentioned on the web are either MRA bullshit sites, or bloggers arguing against it.
OneTrikPony wrote:
So if I undersand correctly, most people here agree with the recent desision of a kansas judge that a sperm donor is responcible for child suport?
I most definitely do not agree. But then again I don't know the details, do you happen to have a link for that decision?
OneTrikPony OneTrikPony's picture
http://www.cnn.com/2014/01/23

Mea Culpa: My mode of speech can make others feel uninvited to argue or participate. This is the EXACT opposite of what I intend when I post.

OneTrikPony OneTrikPony's picture
Here's a beter linkhttp:/

Mea Culpa: My mode of speech can make others feel uninvited to argue or participate. This is the EXACT opposite of what I intend when I post.

Aldrich Aldrich's picture
I remember now.
OneTrikPony wrote:
Here's a beter link http://verdict.justia.com/2014/01/27/craigslist-sperm-donor-owes-child-s...
Thanks! And ah ha! Now I remember hearing about this one back when it happened. That's a mess. Ethically, I don't think that Marotta should have a duty to support the child. Legally, I see why the State ruled the way it did. I guess I see this case as being about contract law more than I see it being about reproductive ethics. The way that Kansas Code 23-2208(f) is written would have prevented this situation, if not for the "provided to a licensed physician" line. I can only construe that as a well-intentioned attempt to protect the health of the donor/recipient (tinfoil hat version: legal cronyism with the sperm donor industry). I happen to fundamentally disagree with the intent - I don't think that it's the proper role of the State to protect people from their own stupidity. If you want to get knocked up using semen in a cup from some guy you met on Craigslist, go for it (I sure as fuck wouldn't do it but hey, I'm not them). The other issue is the unenforceable contract. The fact that the State only recognizes contracts drafted by bar licensed lawyers has always seemed unethical to me. It comes across as revolving-door protectionism of the bar association and legal industry by lawmakers (who are bar lawyers, for the most part). There could have been nothing wrong with the terms of the contract they used, and even if there were problems it should have been challenged on the basis of those. Anyway, this is turning into a derailment. ======================================================== To go back a few posts to your point about Montsanto seed genes vs. the genetic material of the bull breeder - I would argue that neither of them should have legal protection. They already have other means of legal protection: In the case of the bull breeder. You can't steal his bull - that's theft. You can't break onto his property and and take genetic material - that's breaking and entering, trespassing, and theft (of the physical sample). You can't sign a contract for the bull's services in which you agree not to breed any offspring, and then breed them - that's breach of contract. Criminal and civil law already provides remedies for all of these scenarios. It should be the same in the case of Monsanto. If Monsanto sells seeds to farmer A under a contract that prohibits replanting or crossbreeding, and the farmer replants or crossbreeds them - that's breach of contract. If Monsanto sells to farmer A (under the same contract) and the pollen drifts across the road and crossbreeds with farmer B's crops - then Monsanto is fuck out of luck and should have engineered the seeds so that they didn't reproduce. Unless farmer A intentionally arranged the scenario - that's probably breach of contract for farmer A, but nothing for farmer B. Food for thought: in both these cases, I see this as a question of legal ownership of self-replicating property. People aren't property. And what about self-replicating machines?
OneTrikPony OneTrikPony's picture
I think that I am my property
I think that I am my property. I think that the genetics of the bull or race horse are the property of the breeder. It while some instances of how genes can be stolen are covered by law (that was complete and relevant circa 1980) current techniqes are not. You don't need sperm to obtain copy or employ a valuable genetic sequence. Similar to the bull and the racehorse are the athlete, actor, scientist. Except they don't even have the protections of contract law because if you are male and someone uses your genetic material for their own benefit your consent is assumed.

Mea Culpa: My mode of speech can make others feel uninvited to argue or participate. This is the EXACT opposite of what I intend when I post.

Aldrich Aldrich's picture
Your body is your property,
Your body is your property, including the physical DNA that is the medium for your genetics. But how is the information itself your property? Counter examples: Monsanto develops a genetically enhanced corn strain. They then pay to dust every corn field in the world with pollen from their new strain. They don't ask for permission, they just do it from the air. The resulting plants all incorporate Monsanto's genetics. Does Monsanto now have some legal claim to all of the corn in the world? More realistically, when pollen from farmer A's field blows across the road to farmer B's crops, should Monsanto be able to sue farmer B for theft of intellectual property?
OneTrikPony wrote:
Similar to the bull and the racehorse are the athlete, actor, scientist. Except they don't even have the protections of contract law because if you are male and someone uses your genetic material for their own benefit your consent is assumed.
This conflates several points. I've argued above that your consent is explicit (not assumed) when you engage in sex. If someone collects a genetic sample without you knowing (which I would call rape), you obviously could not have consented. If your concern is paternal duty, then of course you're not ethically responsible. If your concern is financial damages, then I maintain that physical property rights are sufficient protection. I'm drawing a hard distinction between genetic material (DNA) and genetic information (gene sequences). It is not possible to acquire the information without first acquiring the material. That material is protected by property rights. Edit: I originally called your argument a straw man. In retrospect I don't think it qualifies as such, so I retract that. I still think you are conflating issues.
Pyrite Pyrite's picture
Lets make this a more
Lets make this a more interesting conversation with a specific scenario: lets say that in ten years genetic engineering becomes advanced enough to safely splice genes from one human to another, to beneficial effects. And lets say that you were born with a rare genetic mutation that allows your body to produce an enzyme that eliminates all known forms of cancer. Producing a genetic treatment based on that part of your genome would be incredibly valuable to millions of cancer patients and to the health corporations that cater to them. In order for this treatment to become available, would companies have to bid you for a license? What if you had personal or religious objections to the idea of other people using your code, would you be within your rights to withhold its use completely?
'No language is justly studied merely as an aid to other purposes. It will in fact better serve other purposes, philological or historical, when it is studied for love, for itself.' --J.R.R. Tolkien
Aldrich Aldrich's picture
What's wrong with my scenarios?
What's wrong with my specific scenario's regarding the Monsanto seeds? I thought they were interesting, and certainly more realistic than a magic cancer cure-all.
Pyrite wrote:
Producing a genetic treatment based on that part of your genome would be incredibly valuable to millions of cancer patients and to the health corporations that cater to them. In order for this treatment to become available, would companies have to bid you for a license? What if you had personal or religious objections to the idea of other people using your code, would you be within your rights to withhold its use completely?
Yes, on all counts. At some point towards the beginning of this scenario, a researcher took a physical sample of your genetic material. At that point, you had the opportunity to contractually limit what he was allowed to do with that sample. If you waived your rights, congratulations, you just cured cancer and the researcher is incredibly rich. If you maintained control, congratulations, you just cured cancer and now you're incredibly rich (though I'd imagine that both parties probably end up incredibly rich). And yes, the objector could withhold. I don't like this type of hypothetical scenario because it's much too extreme: you don't have a duty to society to cure cancer just because you can. The cancer patient doesn't have a right to take it from you by force. But no sane person is going to withhold the cure for cancer due to simple self interest: they're either going to make a shit-ton of money, feel great about themselves because they cured cancer and ended incalculable human suffering, or both.
OneTrikPony OneTrikPony's picture
How could I employ a strawman
How could I employ a strawman aproach? Im the OP. As to conflation; I dont think that's inapropriate. I think the whole issue is reproductive rights. You can name it anything you want but if you own your genetic code it affects a broad range of fields. Let me also say that I dont have a horse in this race. My genetics are crap, I have no kids, I had a vasectomy years ago. (although, so had my father so maybe I do have a very slight concern.) Can we keep religion out of this please? I live in utah. My spouse is mormon my mother is jehovas witness. I am sick-to-the-fuckin-gills of accomodating christians and their concerns. Do you have a moral obligation to humanity if you can cure cancer? YES! Does humanity have a moral obligation to you if you cure cancer? YES!

Mea Culpa: My mode of speech can make others feel uninvited to argue or participate. This is the EXACT opposite of what I intend when I post.

Pyrite Pyrite's picture
I was writing my post at work
I was writing my post at work, so I had to stop midway through to deal with some calls. I started before that scenario was mentioned, though honestly my scenario doesn't involve the owner of the material effectively forcing people to take that material without their consent, so is a more interesting dilemma. And an ethical system needs to stand up to the extreme cases to avoid collapsing into hypocrisy. Your answer (that it would be within your rights but no one would be that much of an asshole) is internally consistent, but I don't think that's everyone's answer.
'No language is justly studied merely as an aid to other purposes. It will in fact better serve other purposes, philological or historical, when it is studied for love, for itself.' --J.R.R. Tolkien
Aldrich Aldrich's picture
Wait, what?
OneTrikPony wrote:
How could I employ a strawman aproach?
You didn't, that's why I retracted my statement.
OneTrikPony wrote:
I think the whole issue is reproductive rights. You can name it anything you want but if you own your genetic code it affects a broad range of fields.
I think that this particular take on reproductive rights is a subset of the debate on intellectual property rights, hence I keep bringing it up.
OneTrikPony wrote:
Can we keep religion out of this please? I live in utah. My spouse is mormon my mother is jehovas witness. I am sick-to-the-fuckin-gills of accomodating christians and their concerns.
Wait, what? You are the first person to mention religion in this thread. Obviously religion is the determining factor in ethics and morality for a lot of people, but I certainly haven't been framing my responses with that in mind. Because you brought it up, I'll suppose I should say that I'm an atheist and that I'm pro-choice.
OneTrikPony wrote:
Do you have a moral obligation to humanity if you can cure cancer? YES!
Why? Totally serious question. I actually agree with you - I'd just like to know the reason behind your response.
OneTrikPony wrote:
Does humanity have a moral obligation to you if you cure cancer? YES!
Why? Same as above.
Pyrite Pyrite's picture
Aldrich wrote:
Aldrich wrote:
Wait, what? You are the first person to mention religion in this thread. Obviously religion is the determining factor in ethics and morality for a lot of people, but I certainly haven't been framing my responses with that in mind. Because you brought it up, I'll suppose I should say that I'm an atheist and that I'm pro-choice.
I brougt it up actually, as a reason why someone might completely withold their consent in the situation I described.
'No language is justly studied merely as an aid to other purposes. It will in fact better serve other purposes, philological or historical, when it is studied for love, for itself.' --J.R.R. Tolkien
OneTrikPony OneTrikPony's picture
On religion; it was brought
On religion; it was brought up in the hypothetical above. The case of refusing to share genetic material on religious grounds. Monsanto has all the protection they need. If some of their seed gets accidently mixed with mine and I plant it they can sue me. If my seed is droped in the road and they pick it up they can do anything they want with it. At least thats my understanding of the Myriad genetics decision. I cant pattent trademark or copyright anything that came about "naturally" As to the moral questions. quid pro quo should be enough reason. Everyone has a debt to society. Society may be indebted to a heroic individual.

Mea Culpa: My mode of speech can make others feel uninvited to argue or participate. This is the EXACT opposite of what I intend when I post.

Aldrich Aldrich's picture
Oh!
Ohhhh! I totally missed that "religious grounds" line in the hypothetical scenario. Sorry! But anyway, aren't we agreeing about Monsanto? I'm trying to argue that Monsanto and the farmer should have exactly the same protection under the law. Monsanto isn't a special snowflake because it used gene injection instead of traditional cross-breeding to make its corn, and it shouldn't be able to sue you for planting a seed that was abandoned in the middle of the road. I think the Myriad decision was wrong. But that's where it tied into the reproductive rights debate we were having. What's the difference between planting a seed found abandoned in the road, and developing a morph from the genetic material of a hair found abandoned in a coffee-shop?
ShadowDragon8685 ShadowDragon8685's picture
Aldrich wrote:And yes, the
Aldrich wrote:
And yes, the objector could withhold. I don't like this type of hypothetical scenario because it's much too extreme: [u]you don't have a duty to society to cure cancer just because you can.[/u]* [u]The cancer patient doesn't have a right to take it from you by force.[/u]⁑ But no sane person is going to withhold the cure for cancer due to simple self interest: they're either going to make a shit-ton of money, feel great about themselves because they cured cancer and ended incalculable human suffering, or both.
* I would disagree with this, actually. Everybody who wasn't born in a hut in the woods and promptly abandoned to be raised by the wolves has benefited in innumerable, immeasurable ways from society. If it is within their ability (especially if the extent of the effort required on their part is to give a blood sample,) to benefit society in return, I would say that they do, indeed, have a duty to do so. ⁑ I would disagree with this, as well. If someone has some genetic mutation that if studied and worked with can provide some kind of massive boon to society - say, a cure or immunization against one or several types of terrible diseases - and they choose to withhold it, for whatever reason; either because of religious objections or because they're holding out for Warren Buffet type money - then I would say that society does, in fact, have the right to seize the required genetics by force. If necessary, the seizing party can invoke imminent domain and make whatever compensation [i]they[/i] deem suitable. At this point, you're talking about the public interest, and seizing genetic material to engineer a cure for cancer is orders of magnitude more compelling a case than seizing someone's home to sell the land to Wal-Mart.
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Aldrich Aldrich's picture
Should we move this to another thread?
We might want to take this to a different thread, given that we're drifting rather far away from the original intellectual property rights / reproductive rights topic. But to address your points.
ShadowDragon8685 wrote:
* I would disagree with this, actually. Everybody who wasn't born in a hut in the woods and promptly abandoned to be raised by the wolves has benefited in innumerable, immeasurable ways from society. If it is within their ability (especially if the extent of the effort required on their part is to give a blood sample,) to benefit society in return, I would say that they do, indeed, have a duty to do so.
I actually agree with you, though perhaps I arrived there by different logic. I phrased this the way I did because I'm trying to express my stance on ethics in terms of absolutes that hold up internally, but that also explain human behavior when applied to the real world. My third sentence (on self-interest) is my real point. The longer version is something like: - Acting in your own self-interest is ethical. - Humans are inherently social creatures, and benefit immensely from society (as you pointed out). - Taking action that benefits society inevitably benefits the individual (in lots of ways, everything from having physical needs met to the sense of satisfaction people get from helping others). - Therefore the only ethical choice in the scenario is very obviously to undergo the minor malus of the discomfort of donating the blood, for the major boon that curing cancer will return to you through an enriched society. Roughly. But most of the time things are not so clear cut, which is why I disagree with your second point:
ShadowDragon8685 wrote:
⁑ I would disagree with this, as well. If someone has some genetic mutation that if studied and worked with can provide some kind of massive boon to society - say, a cure or immunization against one or several types of terrible diseases - and they choose to withhold it, for whatever reason; either because of religious objections or because they're holding out for Warren Buffet type money - then I would say that society does, in fact, have the right to seize the required genetics by force. If necessary, the seizing party can invoke imminent domain and make whatever compensation they deem suitable. At this point, you're talking about the public interest, and seizing genetic material to engineer a cure for cancer is orders of magnitude more compelling a case than seizing someone's home to sell the land to Wal-Mart.
I see your stance on this as a slippery slope. Who gets to decide what counts as "massive" boon to society? How much force is "acceptable force"? What constitutes "suitable compensation", and who gets to decide that? I agree that "taking blood sample to cure all cancer" isn't even in the same ballpark as "demolishing homes to build a Wal-Mart", but at what point is that line crossed? If that line isn't an ethical absolute, and can move around, then how is its placement determined? If you'll allow me to tweak the scenario a little bit: what if the process to extract the cure will assuredly kill the person? Would it still be ethical for society to kill them and take it? How can any compensation that society "deems suitable" be of benefit to them then?
ShadowDragon8685 ShadowDragon8685's picture
Aldrich wrote
Aldrich wrote:
ShadowDragon8685 wrote:
⁑ I would disagree with this, as well. If someone has some genetic mutation that if studied and worked with can provide some kind of massive boon to society - say, a cure or immunization against one or several types of terrible diseases - and they choose to withhold it, for whatever reason; either because of religious objections or because they're holding out for Warren Buffet type money - then I would say that society does, in fact, have the right to seize the required genetics by force. If necessary, the seizing party can invoke imminent domain and make whatever compensation they deem suitable. At this point, you're talking about the public interest, and seizing genetic material to engineer a cure for cancer is orders of magnitude more compelling a case than seizing someone's home to sell the land to Wal-Mart.
[u]I see your stance on this as a slippery slope. Who gets to decide what counts as "massive" boon to society? How much force is "acceptable force"? What constitutes "suitable compensation", and who gets to decide that?[/u]µ [u]I agree that "taking blood sample to cure all cancer" isn't even in the same ballpark as "demolishing homes to build a Wal-Mart", but at what point is that line crossed? If that line isn't an ethical absolute, and can move around, then how is its placement determined?[/u]¶ [u]If you'll allow me to tweak the scenario a little bit: what if the process to extract the cure will assuredly kill the person? Would it still be ethical for society to kill them and take it? How can any compensation that society "deems suitable" be of benefit to them then?[/u]¬
µ Society gets to decide what counts as a "massive" boon to society. Presumably they will have put in place some sort of prior framework of laws or customary precedent which can be called back to. They likewise will have customs or laws in place to determine how much force is appropriate (including escalation if the person they're trying to seize genetics from resists with violence,) and how much compensation they would be entitled to, if any. ¶ "Only Sith deal in absolutes." Hard and fast rules and lines are bad at adapting to situations like this. Ultimately this, again, will have to boil down to what the society in question deems appropriate: is it acceptable to use force to extract genetic samples that can cure cancers? Is it acceptable to use force to extract genetic markers that can reduce erectile dysfunction? I would say yes to the first, and no to the second, unless erectile dysfunction is somehow becoming such an endemic problem that it threatens population or civil stability. ¬ Absolutely it would be! Assuming you're using an ethical framework in which the sanctity of individual autonomy and life is not placed over all other concerns, then sacrificing one life to cure cancers is absolutely ethical. Likely to incur huge P.R. problems, so you'll probably want to do this black-bag style rather than publicly, and as for appropriate compensation, rendering it unto his next-of-kin or into a charitable trust in her name would seem to be one way to start.
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kindalas kindalas's picture
Just a heads up
[color=red]I'm paying attention to this thread. [/color] A couple of places in this thread I felt like if it kept going that way I'd have to issue warnings. But it never went too far people re-directed. Everyone is doing a good job here. So keep up the good discussions. Kindalas
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OneTrikPony OneTrikPony's picture
Im also ok with the hijack.
Im also ok with the hijack. Everyone who has posted has said something interesting to me. I still dont know which side of the fence I'm on or why. Thanks for giving me the benefit of the doubt Kindalas :-)

Mea Culpa: My mode of speech can make others feel uninvited to argue or participate. This is the EXACT opposite of what I intend when I post.

Aldrich Aldrich's picture
What if society is wrong?
ShadowDragon8685 wrote:
µ Society gets to decide what counts as a "massive" boon to society. Presumably they will have put in place some sort of prior framework of laws or customary precedent which can be called back to. They likewise will have customs or laws in place to determine how much force is appropriate (including escalation if the person they're trying to seize genetics from resists with violence,) and how much compensation they would be entitled to, if any. ¶ "Only Sith deal in absolutes." Hard and fast rules and lines are bad at adapting to situations like this. Ultimately this, again, will have to boil down to what the society in question deems appropriate: is it acceptable to use force to extract genetic samples that can cure cancers? Is it acceptable to use force to extract genetic markers that can reduce erectile dysfunction? I would say yes to the first, and no to the second, unless erectile dysfunction is somehow becoming such an endemic problem that it threatens population or civil stability.
I think the problem with this approach is that society, customs, and laws can be blatantly wrong. Just look at the history of slavery. Or the Aztecs, who used to chop off peoples' heads and throw them off of pyramids "so that the sun would keep coming up". I wasn't there, but I can only imagine that the people of those societies thought they were making the ethical choice, for the greater good and all that. In the absence of a system of individual rights, we've always seen tyranny of the majority. Individual rights only work when the rest of society isn't allowed to get together and vote them away! I generally consider individual rights to be natural rights - you get them by nature of being human, they're not bestowed upon you by society (which is generally what I mean when I talk about moral/ethical absolutes). Which brings me to your last point:
ShadowDragon8685 wrote:
¬ Absolutely it would be! Assuming you're using an ethical framework in which the sanctity of individual autonomy and life is not placed over all other concerns, then sacrificing one life to cure cancers is absolutely ethical. Likely to incur huge P.R. problems, so you'll probably want to do this black-bag style rather than publicly, and as for appropriate compensation, rendering it unto his next-of-kin or into a charitable trust in her name would seem to be one way to start.
This ideology scares the shit out of me. I definitely do hold a natural right to life as a primary moral principle (I'm also not a Utilitarian). I can go into greater detail if you like, but first let me ask a follow up question: In this hypothetical scenario, when the black-bag team comes to take the man away, do you think he would he be justified in using lethal force to defend himself? That is, would it be ethical for him to kill the black-bag team to preserve his own life? @Kindalas, OneTrikPony: \thumbs-up. I'm also enjoying the constructive civil debate. :)
Killebrew Killebrew's picture
Aldrich wrote
Aldrich wrote:
ShadowDragon8685 wrote:
¬ Absolutely it would be! Assuming you're using an ethical framework in which the sanctity of individual autonomy and life is not placed over all other concerns, then sacrificing one life to cure cancers is absolutely ethical. Likely to incur huge P.R. problems, so you'll probably want to do this black-bag style rather than publicly, and as for appropriate compensation, rendering it unto his next-of-kin or into a charitable trust in her name would seem to be one way to start.
This ideology scares the shit out of me. I definitely do hold a natural right to life as a primary moral principle (I'm also not a Utilitarian). I can go into greater detail if you like, but first let me ask a follow up question: In this hypothetical scenario, when the black-bag team comes to take the man away, do you think he would he be justified in using lethal force to defend himself? That is, would it be ethical for him to kill the black-bag team to preserve his own life? @Kindalas, OneTrikPony: \thumbs-up. I'm also enjoying the constructive civil debate. :)
I have to agree that this utterly terrifies me. This very much seems to be moving on to a tyranny of the majority, which can all too easily spring up if minority rights aren't protected. I definitely don't want to live in a society where my life may be unwillingly terminated for science, or simply because it's "a 'massive' boon to society." At what point does the line of the greater good against individual rights get drawn in this hypothetical society? What system is in place to prevent those who desire to do so from utilizing propaganda and memetic warfare to sway society to the opinion that they should remove an individual or group because it would be a massive boon to society? Obviously that individual or group is going to have a differing view, but they are a minority while the view of society is a majority rule. Essentially, this hypothetical society seems to me like it's a slippery slope waiting to lead to mob rule where dissension easily becomes a crime. All because this hypothetical society deems that when it comes to the greater good of society, they may remove your rights at will instead of being fundamental rights inherent to all individuals. Effectively, I don't think it is societies place to determine that one life is worth less than any other life or society as a whole. Nor do I feel that society can decide that they have a right to my body, bodily fluids, or organs without my consent. The right for society as a whole to decide what is best for it very much comes to a stop when it comes to an individuals natural rights, to include the right to their body and life. To bring it full circle to the topic that was started, I would say this includes DNA in the body, though that gets murky when the DNA leaves the body when consent is brought in. If forcefully removed, then by all means, that DNA is still the persons, as it was obtained without their consent. Note, that things get a bit wonky when (suspected) criminal actions get brought into play, as it is there are places in the US that can forcibly perform a phlebotomy with a warrant in the case of suspected DUI. But this was not the discussion at hand.
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Axiomatic Axiomatic's picture
The problem with calling the
The problem with calling the DNA still the person's is, well, it is notoriously difficult to repo when someone else is using it. I mean, what are you going to do, use nanomachines to extract all of your DNA from a child's cells? That's, uh, not very nice.
Pyrite Pyrite's picture
Like most IP issues, attempts
Like most IP issues, attempts to curtail it must necessarily focus on distribution. One way or another, genetic piracy is likely to be a thing in the future.
'No language is justly studied merely as an aid to other purposes. It will in fact better serve other purposes, philological or historical, when it is studied for love, for itself.' --J.R.R. Tolkien