Mar 12 2012
From
drugs to help you avoid eating meat to genetically engineered cat-like
eyes to reduce the need for lighting, a wild interview about changes
humans could make to themselves to battle climate change.
The
threat of global climate change has prompted us to redesign many of our
technologies to be more energy-efficient. From lightweight hybrid cars
to long-lasting LED's, engineers have made well-known products smaller
and less wasteful. But tinkering with our tools will only get us so far,
because however smart our technologies become, the human body has its
own ecological footprint, and there are more of them than ever before.
So, some scholars are asking, what if we could engineer human beings to
be more energy efficient? A new paper to be published in Ethics, Policy
& Environment proposes a series of biomedical modifications that
could help humans, themselves, consume less.
Some of the proposed
modifications are simple and noninvasive. For instance, many people
wish to give up meat for ecological reasons, but lack the willpower to
do so on their own. The paper suggests that such individuals could take a
pill that would trigger mild nausea upon the ingestion of meat, which
would then lead to a lasting aversion to meat-eating. Other techniques
are bound to be more controversial. For instance, the paper suggests
that parents could make use of genetic engineering or hormone therapy in
order to birth smaller, less resource-intensive children.
The
lead author of the paper, S. Matthew Liao, is a professor of philosophy
and bioethics at New York University. Liao is keen to point out that the
paper is not meant to advocate for any particular human modifications,
or even human engineering generally; rather, it is only meant to
introduce human engineering as one possible, partial solution to climate
change. He also emphasized the voluntary nature of the proposed
modifications. Neither Liao or his co-authors, Anders Sandberg and
Rebecca Roache of Oxford, approve of any coercive human engineering;
they favor modifications borne of individual choices, not technocratic
mandates. What follows is my conversation with Liao about why he thinks
human engineering could be the most ethical and effective solution to
global climate change.
Judging from your paper, you seem
skeptical about current efforts to mitigate climate change, including
market based solutions like carbon pricing or even more radical
solutions like geoengineering. Why is that?
Liao: It's not
that I don't think that some of those solutions could succeed under the
right conditions; it's more that I think that they might turn out to be
inadequate, or in some cases too risky. Take market solutions---so far
it seems like it's pretty difficult to orchestrate workable
international agreements to affect international emissions trading. The
Kyoto Protocol, for instance, has not produced demonstrable reductions
in global emissions, and in any event demand for petrol and for
electricity seems to be pretty inelastic. And so it's questionable
whether carbon taxation alone can deliver the kind of reduction that we
need to really take on climate change.
With respect to
geoengineering, the worry is that it's just too risky---many of the
technologies involved have never been attempted on such a large scale,
and so you have to worry that by implementing these techniques we could
endanger ourselves or future generations. For example it's been
suggested that we could alter the reflectivity of the atmosphere using
sulfate aerosol so as to turn away a portion of the sun's heat, but it
could be that doing so would destroy the ozone layer, which would
obviously be problematic. Others have argued that we ought to fertilize
the ocean with iron, because doing so might encourage a massive bloom of
carbon-sucking plankton. But doing so could potentially render the
ocean inhospitable to fish, which would obviously also be quite
problematic.
One human engineering strategy you mention is a
kind of pharmacologically induced meat intolerance. You suggest that
humans could be given meat alongside a medication that triggers extreme
nausea, which would then cause a long-lasting aversion to meat eating.
Why is it that you expect this could have such a dramatic impact on
climate change?
Liao: There is a widely cited U.N. Food and
Agricultural Organization report that estimates that 18% of the world's
greenhouse gas emissions and CO2 equivalents come from livestock
farming, which is actually a much higher share than from transportation.
More recently it's been suggested that livestock farming accounts for
as much as 51% of the world's greenhouse gas emissions. And then there
are estimates that as much as 9% of human emissions occur as a result of
deforestation for the expansion of pastures for livestock. And that
doesn't even to take into account the emissions that arise from manure,
or from the livestock directly. Since a large portion of these cows and
other grazing animals are raised for consumption, it seems obvious that
reducing the consumption of these meats could have considerable
environmental benefits.
Even a minor 21% to 24% reduction in the
consumption of these kinds of meats could result in the same reduction
in emissions as the total localization of food production, which would
mean reducing "food miles" to zero. And, I think it's important to note
that it wouldn't necessarily need to be a pill. We have also toyed
around with the idea of a patch that might stimulate the immune system
to reject common bovine proteins, which could lead to a similar kind of
lasting aversion to meat products.
Your paper also discusses
the use of human engineering to make humans smaller. Why would this be a
powerful technique in the fight against climate change?
Liao:
Well one of the things that we noticed is that human ecological
footprints are partly correlated with size. Each kilogram of body mass
requires a certain amount of food and nutrients and so, other things
being equal, the larger person is the more food and energy they are
going to soak up over the course of a lifetime. There are also other,
less obvious ways in which larger people consume more energy than
smaller people---for example a car uses more fuel per mile to carry a
heavier person, more fabric is needed to clothe larger people, and
heavier people wear out shoes, carpets and furniture at a quicker rate
than lighter people, and so on.
And so size reduction could be
one way to reduce a person's ecological footprint. For instance if you
reduce the average U.S. height by just 15cm, you could reduce body mass
by 21% for men and 25% for women, with a corresponding reduction in
metabolic rates by some 15% to 18%, because less tissue means lower
energy and nutrient needs.
What are the various ways humans could be engineered to be smaller?
Liao:
There are a couple of ways, actually. You might try to do it through a
technique called preimplantation genetic diagnosis, which is already
used in IVF settings in fertility clinics today. In this scenario you'd
be looking to select which embryos to implant based on height.
Another
way to affect height is to use a hormone treatment to trigger the
closing of the epiphyseal plate earlier than normal---this sometimes
happens by accident in vitamin overdose cases. In fact hormone
treatments are already used for height reduction in overly tall
children. A final way you could do this is by way of gene imprinting, by
influencing the competition between maternal and paternal genes, where
there is a height disparity between the mother and father. You could
have drugs that reduce or increase the expression of paternal or
maternal genes in order to affect birth height.
Isn't it ethically problematic to allow parents to make these kinds of irreversible choices for their children?
Liao:
That's a really good question. First, I think it's useful to
distinguish between selection and modification. With selection you don't
really have the issue of irreversible choices because the embryo
selected can't complain that she could have been otherwise---if the
parents had selected a different embryo, she wouldn't have existed at
all. In the case of modification, that issue could certainly arise, but
even then I think it's important to step back and ask why we are looking
at these solutions in the first place. The reason we are even
considering these solutions is to prevent climate change, which is a
really serious problem, and which might affect the well being of
millions of people including the child. And so in that context, if on
balance human engineering is going to promote the well being of that
particular child, then you might be able to justify the solution to the
child.
In the paper you also discuss the pharmacological
enhancement of empathy and altruism, because empathy and altruism tend
to be highly correlated with positive attitudes toward the environment.
To me this one seems like it might be the most troubling. Isn't it more
problematic to do biological tinkering to produce a belief, rather than
simply engineering humans so that they are better equipped to implement
their beliefs?
Liao: Yes. It's certainly ethically
problematic to insert beliefs into people, and so we want to be clear
that's not something we're proposing. What we have in mind has more to
do with weakness of will. For example, I might know that I ought to send
a check to Oxfam, but because of a weakness of will I might never write
that check. But if we increase my empathetic capacities with drugs,
then maybe I might overcome my weakness of will and write that check.
Let
me push you a little on that. The Oxfam example is a clean fit for your
argument, but might it be the case that drugs of this sort---empathy
increasing drugs---would cause people to generate entirely new beliefs,
rather than simply mitigating issues having to do with weakness of will.
Liao:
It's conceivable, yes, and to be clear, if that's the case that
wouldn't be something that we would advocate. We are interested only in
voluntary modifications, and we certainly don't want to implant beliefs
into anyone. But even then, those beliefs might still be considered
yours if they arise from a kind of ramping up of your existing
capacities, and so perhaps that could obviate that problem.
I
suppose there are already drugs that might be belief-inducing. You
might think that antidepressants induce new beliefs about self worth, or
about the personalities of other people.
Liao: That's right.
That's a great analogy. If you're very pessimistic about the world, and
you take a drug that will cause you to develop a more positive outlook,
then in some sense those are beliefs that you already desired. In a
case like that the ethical issues might fall away on account of the fact
that you previously desired those beliefs, and that you're aware of the
consequences of taking the drug. We would want as much transparency as
possible with these technologies so that people are aware of the
consequences of using them, and that includes empathy-increasing drugs,
which, if they had the kind of effects you're suggesting, would require
warning labels at a minimum.
In your paper you suggest that some human engineering solutions may actually be liberty enhancing. How so?
Liao:
That's right. It's been suggested that, given the seriousness of
climate change, we ought to adopt something like China's one child
policy. There was a group of doctors in Britain who recently advocated a
two-child maximum. But at the end of the day those are crude
prescriptions---what we really care about is some kind of fixed
allocation of greenhouse gas emissions per family. If that's the case,
given certain fixed allocations of greenhouse gas emissions, human
engineering could give families the choice between two medium sized
children, or three small sized children. From our perspective that would
be more liberty enhancing than a policy that says "you can only have
one or two children." A family might want a really good basketball
player, and so they could use human engineering to have one really large
child.
I have to push back a little on that point. It
seems like those human engineering techniques would be liberty enhancing
only in a context in which there were some severe liberty constraint
that doesn't exist now.
Is there another way these techniques might be liberty enhancing?
Liao:
Well, again, I would return to the weakness of will consideration. If
you crave steak, and that craving prevents you from making a decision
you otherwise want to make, in some sense your inability to control
yourself is a limit on the will, or a limit on your liberty. A meat
patch would allow you to truly decide whether you want to have that
steak or not, and that could be quite liberty enhancing.
Your
paper focuses on human engineering techniques that are relatively safe.
Did your research lead you to any interesting techniques that were
unsafe?
Liao: Actually, yes, although unfortunately the
science is not there yet---we looked into cat eyes, the technique of
giving humans cat eyes or of making their eyes more catlike. The reason
is, cat eyes see nearly as well as human eyes during the day, but much
better at night. We figured that if everyone had cat eyes, you wouldn't
need so much lighting, and so you could reduce global energy usage
considerably. Maybe even by a shocking percentage.
But, again,
this isn't something we know how to do yet, although it's possible there
might be some way to do it with genetics---there are some primates with
eyes that are very similar to cat eyes, and so possibly we could study
those primates and figure out which genes are responsible for that
trait, and then hopefully activate those genes in humans. But that's
very speculative and requires a lot of research.
Some critics are likely to see these techniques as inappropriately interfering with human nature. What do you say to them?
Liao:
Well, first, I would say that the view that you shouldn't interfere
with human nature at all is too strong. For instance, giving women
epidurals when they're giving birth is in some sense interfering with
human nature, but it's generally welcomed. Also, when people worry about
interfering with human nature, they generally worry about interfering
for the wrong reasons. But because we believe that mitigating climate
change can help a great many people, we see human engineering in this
context as an ethical endeavor, and so that objection may not apply.
In
your paper you argue that some of the initial opposition to these
solutions is rooted in a particular kind of status quo bias. Can you
explain what you mean by that?
Liao: Sure. Take having
smaller children for example. People might resist this idea because they
might think that there is some sort of optimal---the average height in a
given society, say. But, I think it's worth remembering how fluid human
traits like height are. A hundred years ago people were much shorter on
average, and there was nothing wrong with them medically. And so, if
people are resistant to the idea of engineering humans to be smaller
because of some notion of an optimal height, they might be operating
from a status quo bias.
Taking a look at this from the
perspective of deep ecology---is there something to be said for the idea
that because climate change is human caused, that humans ought to be
the ones that change to mitigate it---that somehow we ought to bear the
cost to fix this?
Liao: That was actually one of the ideas that
motivated us to write this paper, the idea that we caused anthropogenic
climate change, and so perhaps we ought to bear some of the costs
required to address it. But having said that, we also want to make this
attractive to people---we don't want this to be a zero sum game where
it's just a cost that we have to bear. Many of the solutions we propose
might actually be quite desirable to people, particularly the meat
patch. I recently gave a talk about this paper at Yale and there was a
man in the audience who worked for a pharmaceuticals company; he seemed
to think there might be a huge market for modifications like this.
http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2012/03/how-engineering-the-human-body-could-combat-climate-change/253981/
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