TY - JOUR
T1 - Human nature
T2 - An oxymoron?
AU - Heyd, David
PY - 2003/4
Y1 - 2003/4
N2 - The concept of human nature played an important role in the Aristotelian attempt to characterize the specific difference of humans from other animals and serves as a normative guide. But with the positivistic turn in the modem conception of nature and the denaturalization of reason (typically since Kant), the essential characteristic of human beings can no more be thought of as "natural". The idea of human nature is more commonly conceived as open-ended, and is associated, since Pico della Mirandola, with the human power of self-shaping or transcendence of one's nature. This rift between the human and the natural undermines the coherence of the traditional concept of human nature. Since the concept of human nature is often used in the debates about the moral legitimacy of contemporary genetic technologies, the critical analysis suggested in the first part of the article is used in the second part to assess the force of the argument from human nature in the context of germ line genetic manipulation, genetic engineering, eugenics, and cloning.
AB - The concept of human nature played an important role in the Aristotelian attempt to characterize the specific difference of humans from other animals and serves as a normative guide. But with the positivistic turn in the modem conception of nature and the denaturalization of reason (typically since Kant), the essential characteristic of human beings can no more be thought of as "natural". The idea of human nature is more commonly conceived as open-ended, and is associated, since Pico della Mirandola, with the human power of self-shaping or transcendence of one's nature. This rift between the human and the natural undermines the coherence of the traditional concept of human nature. Since the concept of human nature is often used in the debates about the moral legitimacy of contemporary genetic technologies, the critical analysis suggested in the first part of the article is used in the second part to assess the force of the argument from human nature in the context of germ line genetic manipulation, genetic engineering, eugenics, and cloning.
KW - Genetics
KW - Human nature
KW - Identity
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0038613448&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1076/jmep.28.2.151.14205
DO - 10.1076/jmep.28.2.151.14205
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C2 - 12943212
AN - SCOPUS:0038613448
SN - 0360-5310
VL - 28
SP - 151
EP - 169
JO - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy
JF - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy
IS - 2
ER -