Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Magdalen's avatar

My grandfather was born missing part of his left ear--he had most of the internal workings, but no outer ear at all. When he was born this could not be surgically corrected, but later on in life new techniques made it possible for his ear to be reconstructed and for him to regain some hearing in this ear. He chose not to receive the surgery because he was too used to living with one ear and didn't want to have to adapt again. This has had really, really direct consequences for our ability to communicate with him as he gets older. Maybe 5-7 years ago he reached the point where it is impossible to have a long or detailed conversation with him. I think it's quite likely that this could have been significantly delayed or avoided had he chosen treatment. Other choices around body modification or refusing treatment are much more upsetting and politically charged, but here I find it relatively simple to say that I think his decision not to receive treatment was unambiguously the wrong one. I wish I could talk to him more and I resent that he chose to say no to treatment that would have enabled it.

I think it's an interesting example that plays with the definition of "natural"--to him, having only one ear was his natural state and he didn't want to change it. Of course, the bioplan of the human body includes having two ears, so there is a convincing argument that reconstructing his ear is using medicine to restore the body rather than to enhance it. I'm not sure whether he was saying no to healing or to transhumanism.

Expand full comment
Elizabeth Burtman's avatar

> When have you reconsidered a natural process outside its natural context?

I was thinking recently about the domestication of various food sources. The eggs of a chicken kept in confinement are different from those of a chicken that scratches for most of its food, and those in turn are different (I imagine) from those of a wild jungle fowl. Greens grown in vast monoculture fields are different from wild foraged greens. You can feed bees sugar water, and the result is honey, but is it “really” honey if it isn’t made from nectar? I guess the main insight I’ve come to so far is that virtually everything is touched by technology, broadly defined, in some way, and maybe this too is part of being human. (At least I think this is true in a fallen world where there’s scarcity. Was it supposed to be this way? What will it be like in the renewed creation?)

Expand full comment
40 more comments...

No posts