And New Philosophy calls all in doubt,
The Element of fire is quite put out;
The Sun is lost, and th' earth, and no man's wit
Can direct him where to look for it...
'Tis all in pieces, all coherence gone.
So wrote John Donne in response to the cosmological revolutions of the seventeenth
century that overthrew the old Earth-centred universe. Five centuries later
the idea that the Earth revolves around the sun no longer fills us with dread.
But another scientific advance seems increasingly to engender the same sense
of anxiety that Donne expressed - genetics. From genetically modified food
to the possibility of cloned humans, from the laying bare of the material
basis of personality to the promise of transgenic operations, the new science
threatens to upset our basic understanding of who we are and of our place
in nature. As Bryan Appleyard puts it, the new genetics 'entails the thwarting
of nature at a very fundamental level'.
Brave New Worlds is an attempt to give expression to the deepest pessimism
about genetic science. Some knowledge, Appleyard believes, is so dangerous
that it 'contradicts our most humane instincts'. And genetics is the most
dangerous knowledge of all because, for the first time, 'science has invaded
the human realm', with incalculable consequences.
Appleyard can be an impressive writer, lucid, passionate and erudite. But
here, his dread of science all too often overwhelms his more critical faculties.
The result is a seriously distorted and incoherent polemic. Anyone who genuinely
believes that genetics threatens to 'overthrow the basis on which the wealth
and stability of Western democracies are constructed' has a serious reality
problem.
For Appleyard, the new genetics poses a mortal threat both to our physical
and moral selves. It heralds a return to eugenics, this time not as a state
crusade, but as a privatised, free market enterprise. 'Hitler', Appleyard
argues, 'demonstrated the dangers implicit in science's invasion of the human
realm'. What contemporary genetics has in common with Nazis is the insistence
on human differences. Whereas Nazis saw something in the blood that made Jews
inferior, geneticists 'say there is something in the genes of schizophrenics
that leads to their aberrant behaviour.' And 'once people decide that that
you are a lesser creature for whatever reason, either superstitious or scientific,
there appears to be no limit to what cruelty they may inflict upon you.'
Appleyard links all this to a polemic against 'designer' babies. Once we can
identify genes for particular behaviours, he argues, there will be a tendency
to abort foetuses with traits deemed undesirable - like homosexuality, for
instance. And however distasteful we might as a society find this, as private
individuals we will do whatever is necessary to make life easier for our children.
'The free market', Appleyard writes, 'takes over where Nazism left off.'
Appleyard's argument is both factually and logically incoherent. It is absurd
to argue that prior to the genetic revolution 'the prevailing view was that
people were essentially equal', whereas now science reveals human beings to
be 'profoundly different'. After all, racial science and eugenics existed
well before the emergence of genetics as a science. Genetics says little about
whether human beings should be seen as similar or as different.
Biological differences between individuals and populations are empirical facts
(you don't need a PhD in genetics to observe that that I have a black skin
and Appleyard a white one and that this is a biological difference). What
meaning we impute to those differences, however, is shaped by wider social
and political considerations. If, for instance, as Appleyard suggests, a gene
for homosexuality were to be discovered (a highly improbable prospect) and
this led to parents aborting foetuses with this particular gene, the problem
would lie not in the genetic breakthrough but in the way society viewed homosexuals.
No amount of ranting about designer babies is going to change that.
Appleyard's claim that the new genetics is undermining our moral sense of
what it means to be human is similarly flawed. Genetics, he writes, is 'calling
into question the meaning and reality both of the self and of... free will',
asserting as it does that our genes determine our actions. In fact genetics
says little about human freedom. We are free in so far as we act as if we
are free, and our views about genetic determinism are irrelevant to this.
All this is not deny either that social concerns often shape scientific argument
or the antihumanism that infuses much of genetic and evolutionary theory today.
To understand this, however, we need to look beyond science itself. Appleyard
fails to explore the wider social, political and philosophical transformations
of the past two decades which have made both biologists, and the public at
large, more inclined to view behaviours and personality traits as the product
of predetermined biology, because he is so mesmerised by the idea that the
problem lies with science, and science alone.
The irony is that Appleyard has much more in common with the genetic determinists
than he realises. He ends the book with a polemic against the 'arrogance of
science', pleading for a 'refuge... from the so often disastrous tinkerings
of human reason.' He sympathises with the Christian claim that 'it is the
struggle with the givens of human nature that defines humanity, not the progressive
effort to transform that nature.' What is this but a belief that biology is
fate? Far from demeaning our humanity, as Appleyard believes, science - including
genetics - is a celebration of our most human capacities, helping to free
us from the constraints of nature. After all, if we don't play God, who will?