• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Enhancement and Desire: Japanese Qualms about Where Biotechnology is Taking Us
  • Contributor: LaFleur, William R.
  • Published: Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2008
  • Published in: Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics, 36 (2008) 1, Seite 65-72
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1111/j.1748-720x.2008.00238.x
  • ISSN: 1073-1105; 1748-720X
  • Keywords: Health Policy ; General Medicine ; Issues, ethics and legal aspects
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: In what follows, I draw on things I have found in Japanese discussions of bioethics in order to clarify some aspects of the ethics of biotechnological enhancement. In doing so it will, I hope, become evident that what we might call a “religious” component is in Japan somewhat differently construed than in the contexts with which we are more likely to be familiar in North America. And in the end an attempt will be made here to show that the materials considered give us all – not just the Japanese – reasons for going forward with biological enhancement technologies only on condition that extreme caution be exercised. The fast-moving, oncoming traffic in this domain ought to be forced, these materials suggest, to come up to a caution-demanding signal – not a green light but one that is unambiguously amber. Caution and perhaps even a full stop appear to be in order.