Genetic engineering to cure diseases is eugenics. And eugenics has more wrong with it than guilt by association. It's inherently a dangerous activity, potentially far more dangerous than anything Hitler did. Its danger is contextually expanded due to our dearth of understanding of the processes we engineer, and expanded even further by the social construction of our society.
In response to
The noncentral fallacy - the worst argument in the world?
In response to
The Fallacy of Gray
All who love this post, do you love it because it told you something you didn't know before, or because you think it would be great to show others who you don't think understand this point? I worry when our reader's favorite posts are based on how much they agree with the post, instead of how much they learned from it.
It's possible both are true: that the reader understood the point already, but learned a better way to articulate it in an effort to advance another conversation.
Subscribe to RSS Feed
= f037147d6e6c911a85753b9abdedda8d)
That's the worst argument in the world.
And that is closer to discussing the substance instead of the archetypal example in the category, so might as well skip the first part.
No, I was referencing the "worst argument" as posited in the article, and contrasting from it. I can see how this might have been misunderstood (my wording was poor) but it would be quite silly to literally repeat the fallacious argument from the article as if it hadn't already been discredited, wouldn't it?
Eugenics is inherently dangerous; the danger is far worse than the associations drawn in the "worst argument". I am not saying eugenics is bad because Hitler did it, in fact I'm saying the connection to Hitler does a disservice to understanding the dangers of eugenics. It's inherently dangerous—interfering with genes for arbitrary purposes risks upsetting the entire balance the gene pool has developed without purpose.
That was my entire point.