yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Would a society based on genetics be… good? | Kathryn Paige Harden


2m read
·Nov 3, 2024

Processing might take a few minutes. Refresh later.
  • Eugenics is an interesting word because it could be used to describe a number of different things. So one way to think about eugenics is just as selective breeding, or sort of control over reproduction. So, if we think about involuntary sterilization in Virginia in the 1920s, that's saying there's better people, there's worse people; it's on the basis of something "genetic" about them, and we're gonna allocate freedoms on the basis of that hierarchy.

Some people have reproductive autonomy: they get to choose to have children, but other people don't—they are involuntarily sterilized. So it's this control of reproduction that's coercive and is based on this idea, this hierarchy of people. The predominant response to the eugenic perspective has been what I call 'Genome blindness.' And that's really the idea that we should avoid studying or talking about, scientifically or politically, biological or genetic differences between people.

We can't use any genetic information to slot people into eugenic hierarchy if there are no genetic differences or if we insist they don't matter. If you ask the average American how much do you think genes influence your intelligence or personality or risk for mental illness, their answer is almost never "zero."

So if people already think that genes make a difference for outcomes that they care about, if the only people that are talking about that are the most extreme, sometimes hate-filled voices, that is a problem. I really worry that too much of the conversation is focused right now on the ethics of knowledge production, and not enough on the brass tacks of legislation and policy at the state-by-state level.

I have a colleague and friend here at the University of Texas who wrote a fascinating book called "Predict and Surveil." She embedded herself with the LA Police Department for several years and looked how they saw predictive policing, algorithms, and data aggregation in order to police, and I would say, over-police some communities.

And a lot of the data that they're using comes from proprietary software that's provided by for-profit companies. When people think about dystopian scenarios, I actually worry less about the overt white nationalists and more about people who know they can make money using genetic information.

So the challenge then is, how do we identify genetic differences between people, even genetic differences that might have a relationship to outcomes we care about socially? So something like intelligence, or education, or impulsivity, without using them or interpreting them eugenically.

When we think about our own intimate relationships, we can separate what makes someone valuable, worthy of freedom, worthy of resources, worthy of consideration of welfare, from what does our capitalist economy currently value.

And I think that's the distinction that we also need to draw between observing genetic differences versus using them eugenically...

More Articles

View All
Worked example: over- and under-estimation of Riemann sums | AP Calculus AB | Khan Academy
The continuous function ( g ) is graphed. We’re interested in the area under the curve between ( x ) equals negative seven and ( x ) equals seven, and we’re considering using Riemann sums to approximate it. So, this is the area that we’re thinking about i…
AP Microeconomics FRQ on perfect competition | AP(R) Microeconomics | Khan Academy
Is a type of question that you might see on an AP economics exam, and it’s talking about perfectly competitive markets. So it says a typical profit maximizing firm in a perfectly competitive constant cost industry is earning a positive economic profit. S…
Matrix Theory: Relativity Without Relative Space or Time
[Music] Let us consider a classic relativity scenario. Your friend gets on a rocket ship and blasts off towards Mars at nearly the speed of light. During this journey, his clocks tick slower, his lengths contract, and when he arrives at his destination, h…
ROBINHOOD JUST LAUNCHED A $1 INVESTMENT
What’s up guys! It’s Graham here, and it’s been about a month since I reported on this whole Robin Hood stock trading drama fiasco. Because for the most part, there really haven’t been any updates worth sharing, and I began to believe that things were set…
Sitting Down with the MEK | Uncensored with Michael Ware
MICHAEL WARE: For the people who don’t know, what’s the goal of your movement? MOHAMMAD: The goal of– [laughing] [all laughing] It’s obvious that the goal of our movement is to overthrow the regime and bring about a democratic, pluralistic, secular, uh– …
Genetic Engineering and Diseases – Gene Drive & Malaria
What if you could use genetic engineering to stop humanity’s most dangerous predator, the deadliest animal on the planet responsible for the death of billions, the mighty mosquito? Along with other diseases, it plays host to malaria, one of the cruelest p…