Jonathan Anomaly

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Jonathan Anomaly

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Member Since
February 2019


Average rating: 4.3 · 100 ratings · 23 reviews · 5 distinct worksSimilar authors
Creating Future People: The...

4.18 avg rating — 73 ratings3 editions
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Philosophy, Politics, and E...

4.68 avg rating — 19 ratings — published 2015 — 2 editions
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Creating Future People

4.33 avg rating — 6 ratings
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Philosophy, Politics, and E...

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 1 rating
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Creating Future People: The...

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 1 rating2 editions
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“Evolution is path-dependent. Future populations will be shaped by the choices parents make now. These choices will be influenced by the social and political institutions they live under.”
Jonathon Anomaly, Creating Future People: The Ethics of Genetic Enhancement

“Eugenics has become a dirty word in popular culture because of its excesses in the early twentieth century, including forced sterilization laws in the USA and Germany (which were applied to the ‘feebleminded’ but sometimes also to epileptics and even sexual deviants). But a lot of the criticism of eugenics conflates what Galton and many modern academics in bioethics mean by ‘eugenics’ with how the Nazis misused it [...] Moral grandstanding has become so common in connection with the word that journalists often use ‘eugenics’ to mean something like ‘unjust coercion of innocent parents’. But Galton and Darwin would have rejected this, and so should we. According to Leonard Darwin, Charles Darwin’s son and past president of the Eugenics Society of England, ‘Eugenics is the study of heredity as it may be applied to the betterment, mental and physical, of the human race’ [...] While people disagree about precisely which traits are worth promoting, what motivates eugenics is a concern that individual welfare depends in part on the average traits of a population, and that demographic trends matter to the extent that they influence the success or failure of entire populations.”
Jonathan Anomaly, Creating Future People

“Prometheus was punished for stealing fire from the gods and giving it to people. Fire symbolizes the arts and sciences – the fruits of our cognitive faculties. Although he was sentenced by Zeus to eternal torture for sharing his knowledge, Prometheus is seen by most readers as a hero, and Zeus as a villain.”
Jonathan Anomaly, Creating Future People




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