Dictionary Definition
enhancement n : an improvement that makes
something more agreeable [syn: sweetening]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- an improvement
Extensive Definition
Human enhancement refers to any attempt, whether
temporary or permanent, to overcome the current limitations of the
human
body, whether through natural or artificial means. The term is
sometimes applied to the use of technological means to select or
alter human aptitudes
and other phenotypical
characteristics, whether or not the alteration results in
characteristics that lie beyond the existing human range. Here, the
test is whether the technology is used for non-therapeutic
purposes. Some bioethicists restrict the
term to the non-therapeutic application of
specific technologies — neuro-,
cyber-, gene-, and
nano-technologies
— to human
biology.
Technologies
Human enhancement technologies (HET) are techniques that can be used not simply for treating illness and disability, but also for enhancing human capacities and characteristics. In some circles, the expression "human enhancement technologies" is synonymous with emerging technologies or converging technologies. it is used most often to refer to the general application of the convergence of nanotechnology, biotechnology, information technology and cognitive science (NBIC) to improve human performance.Existing technologies
- Reproductive
technology
- Embryo selection by preimplantation genetic diagnosis
- Human
Performance enhancing drugs
- Physically: doping
- Mentally: Nootropic drugs
- Plastic surgery
Emerging technologies
Speculative technologies
Ethics
While in some circles the expression "human enhancement" is roughly synonymous with human genetic engineering, it is used most often to refer to the general application of the convergence of nanotechnology, biotechnology, information technology and cognitive science (NBIC) to improve human performance.Since the 1990s, several
academics (such as some of the fellows of the
Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies) have risen to
become cogent advocates of the case for human enhancement while
other academics (such as the members of
President Bush's Council on Bioethics) have become its most
outspoken critics.
Advocacy of the case for human enhancement is
increasingly becoming synonymous with “transhumanism”, a
controversial ideology and movement which has emerged to support
the recognition and protection of the right of citizens to either
maintain or modify
their own minds
and bodies;
so as to guarantee them the freedom
of choice and informed
consent of using human enhancement technologies on themselves
and their children. Neuromarketing
consultant Zack Lynch argues that neurotechnologies
will have a more immediate effect on society than gene therapy
and will face less resistance as a pathway of radical human
enhancement. He also argues that the concept of "enablement" needs to be added
to the debate over "therapy" versus "enhancement".
Although many proposals of human enhancement rely
on fringe
science, the very notion and prospect of human enhancement has
sparked public controversy.
Many critics argue that "human enhancement" is a
loaded
term which has eugenic
overtones because it may imply the improvement of human hereditary traits to attain a
universally accepted norm of
biological
fitness (at the possible expense of human biodiversity and neurodiversity), and
therefore can evoke negative reactions far beyond the specific
meaning of the term. Furthermore, they conclude that enhancements
which are self-evidently good, like "fewer diseases", are more the
exception than the norm and even these may involve ethical
tradeoffs, as the controversy
about ADHD arguably demonstrates.
However, the most common criticism of human
enhancement is that it is or will often be practiced with a
reckless and selfish
short-term perspective that is ignorant of the long-term
consequences on individuals and the rest of society, such as
the fear that some enhancements will create unfair physical or
mental advantages to those who can and will use them, or unequal
access to such enhancements can and will further the gulf between
the "haves" and "have-nots".
Accordingly, some advocates, who want to use more
neutral language, and advance the public
interest in so-called "human enhancement technologies", prefer
the term "enablement" over "enhancement"; defend and promote
rigorous, independent safety testing of enabling technologies; as
well as affordable, universal access to these technologies.
References
External links
enhancement in Spanish: Perfeccionamiento
humano
enhancement in Italian: Potenziamento
umano
enhancement in Dutch: Menselijke
verbeteringstechnologieën
enhancement in Japanese: 人間強化
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Great Leap Forward, accelerando, acceleration, advance, advancement, aggrandizement, aggravation, amelioration, amendment, amplification, annoyance, ascent, augmentation, ballyhoo, beefing-up, bettering, betterment, big talk, blowing
up, blowup, boost, burlesque, caricature, complement, concentration, condensation, consolidation, contentiousness,
deepening, deliberate
aggravation, deterioration, dilatation, dilation, embittering, embitterment, enlargement, enrichment, eugenics, euthenics, exacerbation, exaggerating, exaggeration, exasperation, excess, exorbitance, expansion, explosion, extravagance, extreme, furtherance, grandiloquence, headway, heating-up, heightening, huckstering, hyperbole, hyperbolism, improvement, increase, inflation, information
explosion, inordinacy, intensification,
irritation, lift, magnification, melioration, mend, mending, overemphasis, overestimation, overkill, overstatement, pickup, population explosion,
preferment, prodigality, profuseness, progress, progression, promotion, provocation, puffery, puffing up, recovery, redoubling, reinforcement, restoration, revival, rise, sensationalism, sharpening, souring, speedup, step-up, strengthening, stretching, superlative, tall talk,
tightening, touting, travesty, upbeat, uplift, upping, upswing, uptrend, upward mobility,
worsening