Respuesta :

it implies a lot of stuff
to what stuff are you referring to though
During a scene in GATTACA, Vincent’s parents visited a doctor who specialized in child conception to select for the best traits for his future brother. They hoped that his brother would have the best possible chances for a successful life. Some of the traits mentioned in GATTACA included intelligence, height, and any possibility of inheritable diseases. If you decide to have a child one day and are given the opportunity to select for special traits, would you do so? Why or why not? If I decide to have a child, I would definitely not select for special traits, because of a few reasons. The reasons fit mainly into two categories: ethical and biological concerns, and then concerns for the psyche of the child. There may be issues with doing this, and I don’t think it is right to try and engineer a child. But ultimately, the problem is that the child shouldn’t feel like their life has already been chosen for them, which is why I am wholly against this idea. There are many ethical and biological concerns with doing this. I don’t think it would be considered right, especially religiously, to ‘edit’ people and try to control their lives. Even as someone who doesn’t really believe in God, it is still not okay to choose and set your child’s destiny. It should simply happen naturally and be up to the child as to what they want to make of their life. Biologically, there may be issues with editing genes. If everyone starts changing the genes of their children, most people will want similar kind of genes, which will start to limit the human gene pool further than it already is. If any sort of new virus or bacteria strikes, this will limit our ability to adapt, and could cause the extinction of our species. There is a reason that everyone isn’t the same, and it is to allow for Natural Selection and evolution. Therefore we should go against child-engineering. The other huge negative impact of this is on the child themselves. I think that no child should believe that their abilities and limits were created before the were conceived. Genes do not define everything, because nurture counts for a lot, as does the will of the child. I think the child should simply be born naturally, and then they should be allowed to do whatever they want. Once you define them using genes, you don’t only push them up, but you also constrain them. What they are supposed to be capable of doesn’t actually matter. What matters is what they believe they are capable of. And if you don’t edit the genes of the child, they are effectively capable of anything. For these two reasons I would choose not to edit the genes of my child. It would help the human race as a whole, because we need a diverse gene pool to survive any sort of apocalyptic event. What I would care about more though is what my child believes about their own self. Gene engineering is very valid from the parents point of view; its simply the parent trying to help their child succeed. But the children need to be let go, to be free, and they need to control their own destiny. Because if they are not told what they can do, they can believe that they can do anything. yeah beat that