Metanexus: Views 2002.04.09 3926 wordsToday's column, The Case for Green Biotechnology: Attempting to Reach a
Tentative Consensus, by Dwayne Tunstall is a continuation in our exploration
of some of the social, political, and ethical intersections where science
and religion seems to regard each other with more than a passing glance. In
fact, they often seem to be engaged in face-to-face confrontation.
"According to opponents of human GM food consumption," writes Tunstall,
"genetic tampering of crops poses a serious threat to human and
environmental health. Indeed, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has
ignored the warnings of many of its own scientists and permits these
experimental crops to be mass-marketed without adequate safety testing and
labeling, at least until recently."
And this is a global concern, not merely because of the markedly European
movement away from fast food and frankenfood toward "slow food" and organic
products, but also because
"[e]ven now, after the "U.S. Department in Agriculture [issued its]
regulations outlining what qualifies as 'organic' foods," GM food products
are still marketed without government-regulated safety testing (Bailey 25).
In fact, there is evidence that demonstrates the potential harm of using GM
products as a human nutritional source. The Japanese manufacturer Showa
Denko K.K., for instance, began marketing a genetically engineered
L-tryptophan dietary supplement in 1989 - the byproduct of the splicing a
gene to increase tryptophan production into the DNA of bacteria, then
extracting the substance (Druker 1). Within a few months of entering the
market, the dietary supplement manufactured by Showa Denko K.K. "caused an
epidemic of an unusual malady (called EMS) that resulted in the death of 37
people and the permanent disability of at least 1,500 others" (Druker 1;
"FDA Regulation")."
So, how do we deal with what, for the majority of members of the public, is
an invisible interloper in our foodstuffs? Moreover, how do we deal with it
in a healthy, helpful, and sane way? Read on to fiond out some of the
possibilities and problems.
Dwayne Tunstall is a senior at Christopher Newport University in Newport
News, VA, graduating in May 2002 with a B.A. in Philosophy; Values and the
Professions. His interests include Value theory (especially metaethics and
applied ethics),
philosophy of mind, and philosophy of language. He is also a professional
artist and some of his artwork can be found at his website "Embracing the
Contradiction" at <http://web2.airmail.net/dsh440/paintings.html>.
-- Stacey E. Ake
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Subject: The Case for Green Biotechnology: Attempting to Reach a Tentative
Consensus
From: Dwayne Tunstall
Email: <zendeist@hotmail.com>
I. Introduction
Often, ethical disputes arise from conflicting interpretations of
non-moral facts, such as scientific data, due to the cornucopia of
epistemological assumptions among persons. Indeed, one's epistemological
assumptions, or the primary presumptions that the mind filters all
perceptions through and through which these perceptions become intelligible,
greatly influences one's interpretation of the significance of non-moral
factors on human affairs. Epistemological assumptions even have a role in
one's ethical thought processes, especially concerning whether certain
applications of scientific information are morally acceptable. A prime
example of these assumptions leading to differing interpretations of
identical non-moral facts, and thus to a seemingly irresolvable ethical
dispute, comes from the emerging controversy over the acceptability of
genetically engineered (GM) foods as safe human nutritional sources.
Over the course of this paper, I shall expose several of the fundamental
epistemological assumptions held by the opposing factions in the GM
controversy that fuels the current ethical dispute over the human
consumption of GM foods. Then, I shall introduce a novel moral paradigm to
gauge the morality of using GM foods for human consumption, also referred to
as "green biotech" - Richard Beauchamp's interpretation of the harm
principle.
II. Epistemology Assumptions in the Green Biotech Controversy
Ronald Bailey excellently demonstrates, at least superficially, the
conflicting epistemological assumptions underlining both positions in the
green biotech controversy in his January 2001 article in Reason magazine:
"Ten thousand people were killed and 10 to 15 million left homeless when a
cyclone slammed into India's eastern coastal state of Orissa in October
1999. In the aftermath, CARE and the Catholic Relief Society distributed a
high-nutrition mixture of corn and soy meal provided by the U.S. Agency for
International Development to thousands of hungry storm victims. Oddly, this
humanitarian act elicited cries of outrage."
"We call on the government of India and the state government of Orissa
to immediately withdraw the corn-soy blend from distribution," said Vandana
Shiva, director of the New-Delphi-based Research Foundation for Science,
Technology, and Ecology. "The U.S. has been using the Orissa victims as
guinea pigs for GM products which have been rejected by consumers in the
North, especially Europe."
...Per Pinstrup-Andersen, director general for the International Food
Policy Research Institute, observes: "To accuse the U.S. of sending
genetically modified food to Orissa in order to use the people there as
guinea pigs is not only wrong; it is stupid. Worse than rhetoric, it's
false. After all, the U.S. doesn't need to use Indians as guinea pigs, since
millions of Americans have been eating genetically modified food for years
now with no ill effects. (21-22)
How could people perceive the exact same event in such starkly different
terms? Proponents of human GM food product consumption hail the distribution
of the GM corn-soy meal to aid the Orissa storm victims as a humanitarian
act. Opponents of human GM food product consumptions, on the other hand,
view the act as the subjugation of the citizens of Orissa, using them as
"guinea pigs for GM...products which have been rejected by consumers in the
North, especially Europe" (Bailey 21). Let us examine each side's
epistemological assumptions and these assumptions' role in each side's
subsequent interpretation of scientific data.
Anti-Green Biotech Position
According to opponents of human GM food consumption, genetic tampering
of crops poses a serious threat to human and environmental health. Indeed,
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has ignored the warnings of many of
its own scientists and permits these experimental crops to be mass-marketed
without adequate safety testing and labeling, at least until recently. Even
now, after the "U.S. Department in Agriculture [issued its] regulations
outlining what qualifies as 'organic' foods," GM food products are still
marketed without government-regulated safety testing (Bailey 25). In fact,
there is evidence that demonstrates the potential harm of using GM products
as a human nutritional source. The Japanese manufacturer Showa Denko K.K.,
for instance, began marketing a genetically engineered L-tryptophan dietary
supplement in 1989 - the byproduct of the splicing a gene to increase
tryptophan production into the DNA of bacteria, then extracting the
substance (Druker 1). Within a few months of entering the market, the
dietary supplement manufactured by Showa Denko K.K. "caused an epidemic of
an unusual malady (called EMS) that resulted in the death of 37 people and
the permanent disability of at least 1,500 others" (Druker 1; "FDA
Regulation").
Of course, many proponents of human consumption of GM products would
dismiss the Japanese incident as an aberration. Yet, opponents of green
biotech would contend, "For many years, other manufactures had marketed
L-tryptophan supplements produced from bacteria without use of
gene-splicing. Epidemiological evidence from the Center for Disease Control
does not link any tryptophan from these other manufactures with outbreaks of
EMS" (Druker 1; Kilbourne). Therefore, the genetic procedure probably
altered the composition of the bacteria, and the tryptophan also, enough to
cause it to produce "at least one usually toxic containment never before
seen in any of those conventionally produced batches" (Druker 1). In
addition, there are other instances of GM foods causing abnormal diseases,
such as the stomach lesions linked to the consumption of "Flavr Savr"
tomatoes (Druker 4). At the very least, opponents of green biotech say that
consumers should have the option to choose whether they want to purchase GM
food product via a meaningful safety labeling system.
The scientific data documenting instances where GM products caused harm to
humans, however, is not enough to justify the strong, almost violent,
response Vandana Shiva and others have had to CARE and the Catholic Relief
Society's distribution of GM products to the Orissa storm victim. So what
epistemological assumptions underlie their staunch resistance to green
biotech? The Alliance of Bio-Integrity, an anti-green biotech organization,
centers its entire mission statement around one of the most significant
epistemological assumptions fueling the anti-green biotech position - that a
handful of giant multinational agrochemical companies have launched a
massive venture to genetically restructure the world's food supply (Alliance
1). Closely related to the first epistemological assumption, a second one
emerges - that genetic tampering of food crops by these giant multinational
agrochemical companies poses a serious threat to human (as well as
environmental) health and integrity. A third epistemological assumption
arises from the first two assumptions; no one should use biotechnology to
restructure the genetic composition of any organism because it undermines
Gaia's dynamic ecosystem. Thus, from a general evaluation of the anti-green
biotech literature, it seems as though these epistemological assumptions are
the central determiners of how non-moral elements of the GM controversy are
interpreted.
Pro-Green Biotech Position
Proponents of human consumption of GM nutritional products often view the
anti-green biotech position, at best, as a misguided crusade and, at worst,
an outright assault on human dignity. Proponents of green biotech usually
attempt to refute anti-green biotech claims by either citing
government-sponsored or corporate-financed scientific reports that "prove"
the safety of GM food products. Two of the most recent scientific reports
proclaiming the safety of GM products for human consumption were released
last April by a U.S. Research Council panel and last July by Transgenic
Plants and World Agriculture (Bailey 24).
The U.S. National Research Council panel report "[emphasized the fact that
they] could not find 'any evidence suggesting that foods on the [American]
market today are unsafe to eat as a result of genetic modification" (Bailey
24). The Transgenic Plants and World Agriculture report went a step further
than the National Research Council's report and declared in its conclusion:
"To date, over 30 million hectares of transgenic crops have been grown and
no human health problems associated specifically with the ingestion of
transgenic crops or their products have been identified" (Qtd. in Bailey
24). Essentially, these two reports uphold the pro-green biotech advocates'
contention that genetic engineering of crops and their derivatives pose no
adverse risks to human health or environmental integrity beyond those
present in conventional crossbreeding techniques.
Pro-green biotech advocates would probably dismiss the instances where GM
products were harmful to us, like the L-tryptophan incident, as isolated
cases and not representative of the relative safety of these products. They
probably would further contend that there is no concrete scientific evidence
that sufficiently refutes the claim that GM crops are as safe as
conventional crossbreeding techniques. Furthermore, many proponents of green
biotech, as well as many concerned citizens, are disturbed by "the apparent
willingness of biotechnology's opponents to sacrifice people for their cause
[of saving the ecosystem from us "evil" humans]" (Bailey 22).
For instance, pro-green biotech advocates cite such anti-green biotech
spokespeople as the bioethicist Michael Fox who once said, "We are very
clever little simians, aren't we? Manipulating the bases of life and
thinking we're little gods...The only acceptable application of genetic
engineering is to develop a genetically engineered form of birth control for
our own species." (Qtd. in Bailey 22) Another anti-green biotech
spokesperson that proponents of green biotech cite to prove their contention
that anti-green biotech advocates are willing to sacrifice people for their
cause is Benedict Herlin, head of the Green peace's European anti-biotech
campaign. According to the New York Times in "a biotechnology meeting held
in [March 2000] by the Organization for Economic Cooperation...[Herlin]
dismissed the importance of saving African and Asian lives at the risk of
spreading a new science that he considered untested" (Qtd. in Bailey 22).
As for the moderate anti-green contention that governmental agencies should
establish comprehensive safety label systems to allow consumers to know
which food products are genetically modified and which food products are
organic, pro-green biotech advocates call it a red herring. Proponents of
green biotech contend that
"...scare tactics, including the use of ominous words such as frankenfoods,
have created a climate in which many consumers would interpret labels on
biotech products to mean that they were somehow dangerous or less healthy
than old-style foods. [They believe that] biotech opponents hope labels
would rive frightened consumers away from genetically modified foods and
thus doom them." (Bailey 24).
Upon evaluation, the pro-green biotech position centers itself around three
epistemological assumptions: (1) GM crops and their derivatives are at least
as safe as traditional crossbreed crops; (2) anti-green biotech advocates
value their crusade against multinational agrochemical companies even at the
expense of human lives; and (3) anti-green biotech advocates, especially the
spokespeople of the movement, cherish the natural environment more than the
lives of people in the developing world.
III. Shifting the Paradigm - Beauchamp's Interpretation of the Harm
Principle
Comparing the sets of epistemological assumptions underlining the positions
of both sides of the green biotech controversy demonstrate how differing
interpretations of non-moral data leads to the development of differing, and
often conflicting, ethical perspectives. However, is there a way the
factions involved in the GM ethical dispute could at least discuss their
antagonistic perspectives within the same moral sphere? There are a vast
variety of moral theories at one's disposal to evaluate the ethical dilemmas
arising from the GM controversy - e.g., Kantian ethics, utilitarianism,
Aristotelian virtue ethics, feminists ethics, and Rawlsian ethics. Yet, I do
not wish to evaluate the GM controversy using these theories. I want to
evaluate it from a novel moral paradigm, namely Richard Beauchamp's
interpretation of the harm principle in the context of his moral philosophy.
Accordingly, I propose that we reexamine the anti-green biotech and
pro-green biotech positions using Beauchamp's interpretation of the harm
principle.
Beauchamp's Moral Philosophy
To appreciate Beauchamp's harm principle we must understand its function in
his overall moral philosophy. First, we needs to realize that in any society
there exists an implicit moral contract that outlines the guidelines for
desirable coexistence between the members of that particular society ("Moral
Theory" 377). Beauchamp considers the existence of the implicit contract
analogous to "...an embedded potential that stands ready to emerge as one
grows in understanding of how one's life intertwines with others for weal or
for woe...we do not create the moral contract; we recognize it as in the
course of living we feel its pervasive and poignant force and discern its
conceptual structure." ("Moral Theory" 378)
Any ethical theory, Beauchamp contends, is "to render an explicit statement
of those implicit conditions for a desirable coexistence" ("Moral Theory"
379). In this spirit, he offers two pillars to solidify and to reinforce his
rendering of the moral contract; namely, (1) not to ever knowingly harm
others or their vital interests, promising to maintain reasonable awareness
of the harmful effects of one's actions and (2) "to show a positive regard
for [others'] well-being, so long as it is consistent with a prudent regard
for my own well-being" ("Moral Theory" 379). The second promise does not
entail being engaged "in overt acts of doing good; ...it does mean that I
promise always to live in a manner that is consistent with positive good
will towards...all...persons with whom I must coexist" ('Moral Theory" 379).
Beauchamp believes that five interdependent principles are essential to the
actualization of the now-explicit moral contract - the principles of
impartiality, autonomy, inclusiveness, refraining from harm, and beneficence
("Moral Theory" 380-81). The most relevant principle for our discussion,
however, is his principle of refraining from harm; i.e., the harm principle.
As such, a brief explanation of Beauchamp's principle of refraining from
harm is in order.
The principle of refraining from harm answers the second question that the
contract prompts: 'what is the harm to be avoided or minimized?' This
question requires conscientious attention to the effects of our acts. [Once
we recognize the harmful effects of certain acts], every choice which [sic]
relates directly or indirectly to those harm generating acts takes on a
moral quality. In the contractual frame of reference, the dominant moral
sensitivity is that of harm. Who is being hurt? Is the harm avoidable, and,
if not, can it be distributed more equitably than it is now distributed? The
range of concerns that are generated by this sensitivity is very extensive
and it grows with the state of our knowledge. ("Moral Theory" 381)
The questions associated with the principle of refraining from harm cause us
to venture into one more aspect of Beauchamp's moral philosophy - his
typology of the communities of significance, or the arenas of moral agency
where a person becomes a mature moral agent by responsibly participating in
them. "[F]rom a phenomenological point of view, 'community of
interpretation' is really plural, that we simultaneously inhabit a number of
communities of [significance] and consequently face the task giving some
consistency and integrity to the way we indwell each one in the light of who
we are in the others" ("Personhood" 3). In fact, according to Beauchamp,
moral agents "compose their identity in any given role in the light of their
simultaneous membership in other communities of [significance]"
("Personhood" 4). In his typology of the communities of significance, he
expresses what he believes to be the five most common arenas of moral agency
- community of intimacy and kinship, civil communities, enterprise
communities, bio-eco community, and religious/interpretative communities.
For the sake of our discussion, I am restricting my evaluation of the
ethical dilemmas arising from the GM controversy to the bio-eco community
and civil communities.
First, what would a mature member of the bio-eco community regard as the
ethical course of action concerning the usage of GM food products for human
consumption? A responsible member of the bio-eco community would acknowledge
that "[o]ur bodies and their actions are part of the...community which is
responsive to our practices and 'tells' us when we are poisoning her (and
ourselves) and when we are promoting her (and our) health" ("Personhood" 5).
Which position on green-biotech usage most closely adheres to the
requirements of being a responsible member of the bio-eco community? From
the above comparison of the anti-green biotech and pro-green biotech, I
would say that the anti-green biotech activists are more responsible members
of the bio-eco community. On balance, their concern about questionable
safety of many GM food products embody the concern for Mother Earth that is
essential to anyone to be a responsible member of the bio-eco community more
than their counterparts. In fact, according to Beauchamp's harm principle,
the moderate anti-biotech position embodies the most mature moral
perspective on GM food usage because they advocate the development of more
rigorous testing of GM crops and their derivatives to ensure their safety
before being mass-marketed to consumers.
However, there is a second relevant community of significance in our
discussion, the civil communities, which may not regard the anti-biotech
position, especially in its extreme manifestations, as a responsible moral
perspective. In fact, the pro-green biotech position has a higher moral
ground in civil communities than the anti-green biotech position. Unlike the
most influential elements of the anti-green biotech movement, most
proponents of green biotech believe that the supposed harms of GM crops
cannot justify refusing to assist people in need. They recognize that people
in the developing world are members of the global community. They also
recognize that if there is a proven means of alleviating these people's
malnutrition available then we are obligated by the harm principle to use
those means to alleviate it. Indeed, the anti-green biotech position of
refusing to distribute GM food products worldwide is, in itself, immoral
because they are not acting as responsible members of the civil community.
Also, the anti-green biotech advocates have to prove why refusing to allow
anyone to consume GM food products is in accordance with the harm principle
by answering the question, 'what harm is avoided by denying people access to
GM crops?' Yet, what concrete harm would be avoided by outlawing the
production of GM crops for human consumption? I have not discovered any
beyond theoretical concerns. In contrast, a whole list of actual harms that
could be avoided would materialize almost instantaneously if we opened up
access to GM crops to the developing world. For instance, by enabling people
to grow beneficial crops such as "golden rice...[we] could prevent blindness
in half a million to 3 million poor children a year and alleviate vitamin A
deficiency in some 250 million people..."(Bailey 22). However, the
acceptability of using GM crops for human consumption, in the spirit of
Beauchamp's harm principle (within the context of the civil community), does
not mean that proponents can assume that green biotech is as safe as
conventional crossbreeding techniques. As responsible moral agents,
proponents of green biotech should be receptive to any relevant scientific
study that legitimately questions the safety of GM crops and alter their
position accordingly.
IV. Conclusion
Of course, many philosophers and laypeople would not agree with my
assessment of the GM controversy or the methodology in which I evaluated it.
Nevertheless, I believe that I have accomplished my objective of outlining
some of the fundamental epistemological assumptions held by the opposing
factions of the GM ethical dispute and offered a novel moral paradigm to
gauge the moral acceptability of using GM crops for human consumption.
Hopefully, other ethicists will investigate the ethical issues surrounding
biotechnology in general and green biotechnology in particular, since these
issues will be among the most pressing and divisive ethical dilemmas of the
21st century.
I would like to close with an excerpt from Per Pinstrup-Andersen's
comments to the participants of a Congressional Hunger Center seminar:
"We need to talk about the low-income farmer in West Africa who, on half an
acre, maybe an acre of land, is trying to feed her five children in the face
of recurrent droughts, recurrent insect attacks, recurrent plant diseases.
For her, losing a crop may mean losing a child. Now, how can we sit here
debating whether she should have access to a drought-tolerant crop variety?
None of us...[has] the ethical right to force a particular technology upon
anybody, but neither do we have the ethical right to block assess to it. The
poor farmer in West Africa doesn't have any time for philosophical arguments
as to whether it should be organic farming or fertilizers or GM food. She is
trying to feed her children. Let's help her by giving her assess to all of
the options. Let's make the choices available to the people who have to take
the consequences." (Qtd. in Bailey 29)
Works Cited
Alliance for Bio-Integrity. "Alliance for Bio-Integrity, Home Page."<http://www.bio-integrity.org> Accessed: Jan. 8, 2001.
Bailey, Ronald. "Dr. Strangelunch, Or: Why We Should Learn To Stop Worrying
and Love Genetically Modified Food." Reason. 32.8, Jan. 2000: 21-29.
Beauchamp, Richard A. "Moral Theory and Moral Education: The Neglected
Connection."
Becoming Persons: Proceedings of the Second Conference on Persons. Vol. 1.
Ed. Robert N. Fisher. Oxford: Applied Theology P, 1995. 375-383.
_____."Personhood and Communities of Interpretation: A Phenomenological
Foray." Unpublished manuscript.
Druker, Steven M. "Executive Summery: How the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration Approved Genetically Engineered Foods Despite the Deaths They
Had Caused and the Warnings of Its Own Scientists About Their Unique Risks."<http://www.biointegrity.org/execsummaryoecd.html> Accessed: Jan. 8, 2001.
Human Resources and Intergovernmental Subcommittee of the Committee on
Government Operations, U.S. House of Representatives. "FDA's Regulation of
the Dietary Supplement L-Tryptophan." Washington, D.C.: GPO, 1991.
Kilborune. E. Journal of Rheumatology Supplement. 46. Oct. 1996.
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