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J Med Ethics 2004;30:e8
© 2004 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd & Institute of Medical Ethics


BOOK REVIEW

Enough: staying human in an engineered age

F Chessa

B McKibben, Henry Holt, Company, New York, 2003, hardback, pp 288. ISBN 0805070966

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

Bill McKibben’s book, Enough, is about cloning, genetic enhancement, and nanotechnology. His thesis is that these things are bad—nay, they are downright evil. In vivid and readable prose, McKibben explains what will soon be possible with these technologies and provides a dystopian portrait of the future. His alarmist tone is effective. Despite having read several similar works and remaining unmoved, McKibben’s images struck home with me. I began to feel, in my gut, anxiety about the genetically engineered future. McKibben is no stranger to raising the dangers of new technology. His The End of Nature is widely acclaimed to have alerted an unsuspecting public about the danger of global warming. Alarmism was appropriate for The End of Nature, since little was written on global warming prior to 1989. But despite McKibben’s effective writing, his alarmism . . . [Full text of this article]







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