Redesigning life : eugenics, biopolitics, and the challenge of the techno-human condition /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Van Camp, Nathan, author.
Imprint:Bruxelles : P.I.E. Lang, [2015]
Description:1 online resource.
Language:English
Series:Philosophy & politics ; no. 27
Collection "Philosophie et politique" ; no. 27.
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/13417905
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:3035265445
9783035265446
9782875742810
2875742817
Notes:Print version record.
Summary:The emerging development of genetic enhancement technologies has recently become the focus of a public and philosophical debate between proponents and opponents of a liberal eugenics - that is, the use of these technologies without any overall direction or governmental control. Inspired by Foucault's, Agamben's and Esposito's writings about biopower and biopolitics, the author sees both positions as equally problematic, as both presuppose the existence of a stable, autonomous subject capable of making decisions concerning the future of human nature, while in the age of genetic technology the nature of this subjectivity shall be less an origin than an effect of such decisions. Bringing together a biopolitical critique of the way this controversial issue has been dealt with in liberal moral and political philosophy with a philosophical analysis of the nature of and the relation between life, politics, and technology, the author sets out to outline the contours of a more responsible engagement with genetic technologies based on the idea that technology is an intrinsic condition of humanity.
Other form:Print version: Van Camp, Nathan. Redesigning life. Bruxelles : P.I.E. Lang, [2015] 9782875742810 2875742817
Standard no.:YBP12534998