Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 212
Trim: 5¼ x 8½
978-1-4422-1762-1 • Hardback • August 2012 • $48.00 • (£37.00)
978-1-4422-1763-8 • Paperback • June 2015 • $29.00 • (£21.95)
978-1-4422-1764-5 • eBook • August 2012 • $27.50 • (£20.95)
Gregory E. Pence, is a professor of philosophy at the University of Alabama and an expert in medical ethics, is the author or editor of numerous books on bioethics including, Medical Ethics, Elements of Bioethics, Who’s Afraid of Human Cloning?, and Cloning After Dolly.
Preface
Part I—Competent Adults
Chapter 1: What if Your Virtual Life Surpasses Your Real Life?
Chapter 2: Lessons from Bioethics’ History
Chapter 3: Expanding the Mind with Drugs
Chapter 4: Building Better Female Bodies
Chapter 5: Building Better Male Bodies
Chapter 6: Is it Moral to Feel Better than Well?
Chapter 7: Practical Ways to Build a Longer Life
Chapter 8: Is It Wrong to Live to a Hundred?
Chapter 9: Personalized Genomics: Caveat Emptor!
Part II—Choosing Better, Future Children
Chapter 10: Choosing a Better Embryo
Chapter 11: Eugenic Abortions?
Chapter 12: Building Better Fetuses in Utero
Chapter 13: Building Better Kids at Birth: Vaccinations
Chapter 14: Building Better Minds of Children: Ritalin and Adderal
Part III—Changing Human Nature?
Chapter 15: How Not to think about Genetic Enhancement
Chapter 16: Human Enhancement; Six Psychosocial Objections
Chapter 17: Overview: Cloning, Primordial Cells & Enhancement
Chapter 18: Conclusions and Six Practical Proposals
Acknowledgments
Human enhancement is an important topic. However, too many authors dwell on improbable scenarios, such as genetic engineering of super-babies. By contrast, this book tackles the real ethical dilemmas that our society faces today. Is it wrong for healthy college students to boost academic performance with Ritalin and similar drugs? Is increased longevity a bane or a boon? How can simple interventions like good nutrition and vaccinations produce children who are not only healthier but smarter? Professor Gregory Pence uses science, logic, and ethics to analyze these and many other topics. Along the way, he explains why we need not fear designer babies and other Brave New World scenarios. Legislators and other policymakers should read this timely and fascinating book so that they will know what to regulate—and what to leave alone
— Kerry Lynn Macintosh, Santa Clara University
From Frankenstein to GATTACA innovative biomedical technologies have been portrayed as bogeymen and dystopias. Bringing commonsense to bear on subjects often misrepresented by enthusiasts and alarmists, bioethics professor Gregory Pence, author of Whose Afraidof HumanCloning, clarifies the science and dispels the hype and paranoia surrounding the bioethics of everyday life. He offered reasonable answers to such questions as: Should I use life extending medical or mind enhancing drugs? Is there anything wrong with extending peoples' lives? Should I vaccinate my children? Is it OK to take anti-depressants? Is there something to fear from the new genetics or from stem cell research? How to Build a Better Human provides astute and invaluable advice on these issues and is without a doubt the best "How To" book ever published in bioethics.
— Robert Baker, Union Graduate College, FiT Publishing
Gregory E. Pence has managed to wed nuance, rigor and wit in the service of one of the thorniest issues in bioethics. The debate over human enhancement is too often shaped by ideologues and zealots – and too infrequently informed by the kind of thoughtful and enjoyable analysis found in How to Build a Better Human.
— Kenneth W. Goodman, University of Miami