Extended Life, Eternal Life.On March 5 and 6, the John Templeton Foundation The John Templeton Foundation was established in 1987 by investor and philanthropist Sir John Templeton; the current president is his son John M. Templeton, Jr. It is usually referred to simply as the Templeton Foundation. and the University of Pennsylvania (body, education) University of Pennsylvania - The home of ENIAC and Machiavelli. http://upenn.edu/. Address: Philadelphia, PA, USA. hosted a conference called "Extended Life, Eternal Life," with participants discussing the ethical and theological implications of our increasing ability to extend and enrich our lives through biotechnology. As might be expected, tempers flared, with anti-biotech speakers such as The Hastings Center's Daniel Callahan declaring, "The worst possible way to resolve [the question of life extension] is to leave it up to individual choice.[ldots]There is no known social good coming from the conquest of death." Gregory Stock Gregory Stock is a biophysicist, best-selling author, biotech entrepreneur, and the director of the Program on Medicine, Technology and Society at UCLA’s School of Medicine. , director of UCLA's Program on Medicine, Technology, and Society, begged to differ, suggesting, "We are not moving toward a cataclysmic cat·a·clysm n. 1. A violent upheaval that causes great destruction or brings about a fundamental change. 2. A violent and sudden change in the earth's crust. 3. A devastating flood. reckoning. Instead, I offer you the image of birth. Like birth, this period [of nascent biotech] is messy, bloody, and traumatic, but it is the beginning of a new era. Future humans will look back on this period as the time when the very bases of their lives were laid down and thank us." Some of the conference materials (including an archived debate on "Should biomedicine biomedicine /bio·med·i·cine/ (bi?o-med´i-sin) clinical medicine based on the principles of the natural sciences (biology, biochemistry, etc.).biomed´ical bi·o·med·i·cine n. 1. seek to treat dying like a disease--and seek to cure it?") are available on the Web at www.extended-eternallife.org REASON Science Correspondent Ronald Bailey attended the conference and filed daily dispatches, available at www.reason.com/opeds/rb030600.html. |
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