Repository logo
 

Genetic enhancements and relational autonomy: Christian ethics and the child’s autonomy in Vulnerability

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

No Thumbnail Available

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Massmann, A 

Abstract

jats:p Technical advances in genome editing methods raise the question how autonomy should figure in theological ethical debates about genetic enhancements. Thinking primarily of the parents’ reproductive autonomy, several secular and theological thinkers argue parents should be allowed to ‘enhance’ an embryo genetically. Jürgen Habermas’s critique of enhancements in the name of the child’s autonomy, meanwhile, has been met with a critique of autonomy in theology. This article argues that theological views about God’s relationship to the creature provide strong theological grounds for a new appropriation of autonomy. A liberal maximisation of individual choice is to be viewed critically, but more recent discourses on relational autonomy see certain forms of vulnerability contribute to a communal understanding of autonomy. This view dovetails with Habermas’s argument, according to which enhancements create too strong a temptation towards overly directive parenting—less in modifying an embryo than in the ensuing relationship to the child. </jats:p>

Description

Keywords

Autonomy, enhancements, genome editing, Habermas, relationality, vulnerability

Journal Title

Studies in Christian Ethics

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0953-9468
1745-5235

Volume Title

32

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Rights

All rights reserved