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Sohail Inayatullah


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#1 Bruce Klein

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Posted 18 December 2003 - 07:04 AM


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Sohail Inayatullah
Academic

Dr. Sohail Inayatullah, a political scientist, is Visiting Professor at Tamkang University, Taipei, Visiting Academic at Queensland University of Technology, Adjunct Professor at the University of the Sunshine Coast, and Professor of Futures Studies with the IMCA (International Management Centres Association), University of Action Learning. Inayatullah is Fellow of the World Futures Studies Federation and the World Academy of Art and Science.

In 1999, he held the UNESCO Chair at the Centre for European Studies, University of Trier, Trier, Germany and the Tamkang Chair in Futures Studies at Tamkang University, Taipei, Taiwan. From 1981-1991, he was senior policy analyst and planner with the Hawaii Judiciary, where he coordinated the Court's Foresight Program.

Publications

Inayatullah is co-editor of the Journal of Futures Studies and associate editor of New Renaissance. Inayatullah is on the editorial boards of Futures, Development and Foresight.

He has written over 200 journal articles, book chapters, encyclopedia entries and magazine pieces.
http://www.kurzweila...os/bio0100.html?




Hi Bruce

Some choices here. My preference is a 1981 article I did called, the Futures
of Death and Dying. It was my first piece published, and looked at the three
major trends (living forever, reincarnation, and holistic dying movement).
It might fit in as an oldie (but hopefully goodie).

I don't yet have it in e-version though, just in printed version. I could
mail you a copy and perhaps someone can scan.

Alternatively, here are two recent pieces, that I could modify for the book,
if you like any of them.

Finally, were you still planning on writing the essay for journal of futures
studies. If yes, how is it going, if no, no worries.

sohail


Sohail Inayatullah
Professor, Graduate Institute for Futures Studies
Tamkang University, Tamsui, Taiwan, 251
Fax: 886-2-2629-6440
www.metafuture.org, http://www2.tku.edu.tw/~tddx/jfs/


Adjunct Professor, University of the Sunshine Coast
Maroochydore 4558, Queensland, Australia

Please reply to: s.inayatullah@qut.edu.au


----


Dear Sohail,

You are too kind!
Considering my failure to respond to your essay request (twice),
you've maintained superb cordiality. Thank you.

Shamefully, I've only now started the revision process,
but will submit the essay to you. Currently I’m working myself
out of an email glut – due to great response to the ImmInst
Book Project, but I will get the essay to you.

OK, enough crying from me.

I'm excited to read your 1981 article! Perhaps you can mail
it to me, and I'll scan and forward to the editing team.

Also, if your two recent works are readily available (email), I can
forward these to the editing team and they'll have a head start on the
review process.

We’ve been very pleased with the project response thus far, and will
likely create more than one book going forward to accommodate all
of the wonderful article submissions.

Warm Regards,
Bruce Klein

#2 Bruce Klein

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Posted 18 December 2003 - 07:04 AM

ALTERNATIVE FUTURES OF GENETICS AND DISABILITY


Sohail Inayatullah
Professor, Tamkang University, Sunshine Coast University, Queensland University of Technology
www.metafuture.org

Based on a speech presented to the Queensland Advocacy Incorporate Conference on Genetics and Disabilities, Brisbane, October 7, 2002




In this presentation, I would like to map out the futures of genetics and disability with the intent to aid in the creation of a third moral space, as developed by David Turnbull, contesting both the technocratic and the rights approaches.

To do so, it is important to get a handle on the future: what its alternative meanings and uses are.
FOUNDATIONAL APPROACHES TO THE FUTURE

Three approaches are foundational. They are: (1) the future as given, (2) the future as transcendental and (3) the future as contested.


(1) The future as given – taken for granted. This is the commonly held view that there is a singular future that we must respond to. The future is often framed as what will the future be. More often than not technologies are seen to drive this future. Human agency tends to be removed from this approach except for those at the center of technological power.

(2) The future as transcendental – accepted because it is Allah’s will. In this approach the future is not in our hands, we must submit to higher forces beyond our control. The goal is to go back to the original text and use it as a guide to understanding the future.

(3) The future as contested. The future here is seen as created by a variety of factors – pushes, pulls as well as weights (patterns of history, paradigms). The future is to be decolonized, challenged, rethought, and then an alternative future created.

I certainly prefer the third of these approaches, as this allows human agency but is not so naïve as to believe that ‘you can be all that you can be’(the Western, and particularly postmodern American view of boundless opportunities) – there are limitations, whether because of structure, planetary resources, or even because of forces that are mysterious.

Of course, the new genetics challenges traditional notions of the nature of nature, so much so that, reports Newsweek, one Eric Sprague wants to inject himself with jellyfish proteins, a process that has made rats glow in the dark. “I just want to be glowing green. I’ve looked into being a human subject without much success thus far”.
What then are the uses of the future?
Commonly, the future is considered a statement about the probability of an event or trend occurring in forward time, that is, we do not remember the future per se. However, as important as our constructions of the future, are the various uses of the future. These include the following:

First, the future is educational. The purpose of understanding the future is to develop a conceptual map, to be able to understand theories, methods and values. The future is often constructed as a fascinating idea, full of marvel and possibility.

Second, the future is strategic. Through scenario planning, it can be used to make better decisions. The implications of current trends can be inferred and these trends can thus be challenged: the future as a future impact statement. The future that is best can thus be consciously chosen depending on how one defines ‘best’ – the issue is, which future?

Third, the future is about capacity building. More important than solely education – in terms of the internalization of knowledge – is developing the internal and external capacity to adapt to alternative futures. Thus, getting the future right in terms of the correct strategy is not as important as having the capacity to adapt, to find one’s niche. Organizationally, this means being future active, moving from thinking about the future to capacity building for the future.

Fourth is memetic change. The future developed is a preferred one. It means spreading ideas and metaphors that encapsulate the desired future.

Fifth, and perhaps the most contentious, is the future as microvita change. Microvita is a term used by philosopher P. R. Sarkar to represent the basic stuff of the universe – being both matter and idea, body and mind, wave and particle. Microvita change is about living the future one desires, living in the future. It means that there is an inner dimension to our vision of the future. Real change comes about by being the future not just forecasting it, learning about, developing capacity or even meming it. One becomes the future one envisions.

Essentially, these divisions move the notion of the future as methods and mapping (educational) to an idea that empowers (strategy and capacity building) to an idea that transforms (memetic and microvita change).

Within this framework, I would like to map out the future. However, this is an open-ended map, in need of further development.

This map uses the futures tool, the futures triangle. The futures triangle maps three dimensions: the push of the future (new technologies, globalization, demographic shifts such as aging and migration), the pull of the future (competing images of the future: Gaia versus global tech versus collapse versus national realism, for example) and the weight of the future (what is problematic to change, deep structures). Taken together the triangle of the future presents a way to map the competing dimensions of the future. This is useful in that with a simple diagram the dialectics of the future can be understood. The future is not seen as fixed out there but as being created by various processes (and not being created because of historical patterns or weights).

GENETIC AND DISABILITY FUTURES



COMPETING PULLS OF THE FUTURE
TECHNO-UTOPIAN
MEDICALIZED POST-INDUSTRIAL DISCOURSE
SOCIAL WELFARE CARING DISCOURSE
PARTNERSHIP DISCOURSE

?



























PUSH OF THE FUTURE WEIGHT

GENETICS Evolution
GLOBALIZATION Spencer
AGING
CULTURAL CREATIVES
ARTIFICAL INTELLIGENCE
Thus, what the triangle suggests is that the future is not created. There is a tension between the pushes – the technological imperative and costs associated with it – and the pulls and weights. The pushes appear to be neutral -but they are related to images.

The technocratic utopian pull is best exemplified by the movie Gattaca. In the Social Welfare Caring discourse, the most vulnerable are taken care of, but through bureaucratic means. Care is routinized. In the medicalized post-industrial image, the focus remains on profit. Genetics develops through the actions of large pharmaceuticals. However, it is post-industrial as the one size for all industrial paradigm that is challenged. Writes Sandy Edry:

The problem with medicine’s one-size-fits-all approach is that it doesn’t account for the subtle variations in our genes that make each one of us unique. By 2012, though, your general practitioner may be better equipped. In what’s being touted as the ‘era of personalized medicine’ newborn babies would have their genomes etched in microchips. The information would allow doctors to tailor drugs, diets and treatments to each person’s particular genome, avoiding drug fatalities, zeroing in on disease-prevention strategies and helping us lead healthier lives.

I would thus not discount the image of the future. It appears the least tangible but in fact has tremendous impact on which future is actually created. The pull, argues Polak, influences the rise and fall of civilizations. Pulls that are positive and include agency can move us forward. Certainly pulls that have are negative and discount agency have the opposite result. We know as well from the health literature that one's image of future health and one’s sense of agency are far more important than other factors – diet, exercise and even genes.

The pushes are well known. They are the drivers of the future. Which push often becomes dominant is dependent on the image of the future and the strength of the weights. For example, gene research is dominant because of the hegemony of the techno-utopian image. The cultural creatives push is championed by those with a more spiritual partnership view of the future. The weight here is the evolutionary notion of competition and survival of the fittest.

Thus creating the future is a mixture of push, pull and weight. The weights are varied, including most certainly evolution, the fear of the other and the Spencerian overlay to gene research. What then are the alternative futures that emerge? I present these as scenarios, alternative possibilities.

SCENARIOS

1. CONTINUED GROWTH
Genetics and disability are defined in terms of increasing quantity of life, preventing diseases and enhancing human potential. Science remains corporatized. There is, however, resistance from all aspects of society – costs, rights, for example. Issues of equity are central here as well as ‘rogue’ nations developing gene warfare capacity. Other aspects of disease prevention remain. The main driver is globalization in its corporatist and governmentalist form.
2. TECHNOLOGICAL TRANSFORMATION
Human Evolution accelerated through genetics plus the artificial intelligence revolution, the 8th day of evolution.Essentially, this is the slippery slope from gene prevention to gene therapy to gene enhancement to germ-line intervention. With issues of equity arising, the state is likely to manage and control reproduction. Eventually there will be a full range of life forms, human, cyborg, gene-borgs, to mention a few. The main driver is technology, particularly the synthesis of genetic and artificial intelligence technologies.
3. COLLAPSE
Genetic experiments lead to mistakes and accidents. Germ-line intervention continues these mistakes across generations. It is not the 8th day of evolution but a return to the beginning. Human have failed but Gaia continues. Another species rises. The driver remains technology but the guiding weight is that of humanity going beyond its boundaries.
4. SOCIAL TRANSFORMATION
Post-normal science develops – action learning, participatory, public – along with social transformation. Gene therapy and therapeutic cloning is likely to be allowed but germ-line intervention is banned for another generation. The health model that develops is inclusive, ecological (Gaian-based), multi-door (geneticist plus GP plus homeopath plus massage therapist plus meditation plus diet and exercise). Writes Jennifer Fitzgerald:

Gene therapy continues, but people with disability advise scientists on crucial differences such as between the intention to enhance health and to eliminate disability. The voices of people with disability are central in this scenario … What are needed are not only policies but value transformation that include their ways of knowing in creating gene futures.

This scenario is the desire for a better world, a social utopia, being asserted by cultural creatives and others fatigued by 500 years of world capitalism.
5. RETURN TO PAST
Heroic science is stopped by the religious right. We – in OECD nations – all die at 70 in any case. Genetic science only for the select few. Strong global protocols against most forms of intervention. Efforts to return to traditional forms of medicine (family based, GP that listens, local traditions). Genetic experiments take off in non-regulated areas in the world. The drivers here are the technology revolution in the context of inequitable globalization.

But while the past may beckon many, it is the long term future that stares at us. Humans may be the first creatures to – through artificial intelligence and germ-line intervention – create their future successors.

CAUSAL LAYERED ANALYSIS
While scenarios focus on breadth, CLA moves to depth. It seeks to go beyond the litany of the future. Forecasts are nested in the system.For example, the litany is that genetics will solve disabilities, either through predicting and then terminating fœtuses that are abnormal or through gene therapy. Inappropriate genes can then be weeded out through germ-line intervention. Of course, not all disability is genetically linked. For example, cerebral palsy occurs when oxygen to the brain is cut off during the birth process. As well, traumatic brain injury has nothing to do with genetics (there might be a correlation with drug/alcohol use tendencies, but not this has not thus far been linked to genetics).

These forecasts are nested in the larger medical and health system; in this case, the technological, medical, corporate, governmental and other institutional relationships that define the future. The main concern of this system is cost to the society. Secondary are the costs and pain of relatives. Cost and pain of the disabled comes third.

Writes Robin Brandt, a futurist who has written on disability futures:

The medical and health system model makes the person with disability unable to participate in society except as a ‘sick’ person. Unable to participate in society in a responsible fashion, that they are constructed as not having responsibility, this also means they have no ‘rights’. They are relieved of their responsibilities as a citizen! Additionally, because they are not able, they must be told what to do by the licensed, degreed and fully examined expert who makes plans or prescribes to the individual.

Nested in the overall system are worldviews. In genetics, this is a Spencerian worldview – evolution of the fittest – but placed on the society. This view is reductionist, seeking to solve problems through technology instead of through social, political and consciousness change. Other worldviews include the spiritual new age, focused on transforming consciousness, the quality of life, and the industrial, focused on enhancing the quantity of life, and giving funds and social care to the disabled.

Beneath these levels are unconscious stories, or myths and metaphors. The disabled are the ‘other’ in this future, to be changed, transformed, but not as treated partners. Perhaps, Cyclops is the unconscious myth. Another myth is that of the geneticist as God or angel, giving life back to those that have been marked.

Changing the future requires intervention at all these levels: finding new litanies, rethinking the system, challenging worldviews and creating new metaphors. For example, in issues of quality in medicine, the litany is 70-100 thousand a year dying from medical mistakes in the USA. The litany response is ‘train better doctors’. However, a move to the system level alerts us that it is the institutional relationships between nurse, surgeon, hospital cleaner, CEO that is likely to generate the problem; merely training better general practitioners will not solve it. No-fault systems, action learning and other quality enhancing measures are needed. But is that enough? A move to the worldview level suggests that it is the vertical relationship between surgeon and patient that is the problem – it is the nature of medicine itself that must be transformed. This means challenging the mythology not only of science and medicine, but also of modernity – the desire to live forever. and the search for perfection and progress.

Thus praxis must be at every level – A real challenge.

What then the future?
Which is your preferred future? Which future is probable? Which future must we avoid? What can be done? Is it possible to create a third moral space? What are our choices? And how will genetics define choice? As Graham Molitor argues, we could add a new chromosome pair to the human genome, “Designed to carry specific therapeutics and traits, these modules could be switched on or off, at the carrier’s option, simply by taking a pill or an injection.

A real challenge, indeed.

APPENDIX – INSTITUTE FOR ALTERNATIVE FUTURES SCENARIOS
Four Scenarios for Genomics

A recent IAF project for the UK government's Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) used multiple scenarios to explore the social science implications of the genomics revolution. These scenarios combined forecasts and key drivers of genomics into four alternative visions of genomics in 2015. The full text of these abstracts is available at


Genomics, Inc. – Genomics gains more public acceptance as better safety standards and new applications demonstrate the value of its applications. Mergers and alliances create a handful of ‘Life-Science’ conglomerates that operate on a global scale. Many individuals use genomics to identify their unique health risks and sensitivities. Untoward consequences are not significant.

Broken Promises – Genomics applications prove more difficult to develop than expected, and several prominent genomics accidents turn public opinion against genomic technology. Activists mobilize for stronger measures against the industry and further reduce public demand. Liability lawsuits severely diminish the industry and public pressure forces genomic patents into the public domain.

Out of Our Control – Genomic breakthroughs accelerate and the costs of research decline; throughout the developed world, applications are delayed in the approval processes. In the meantime, developing nations, particularly China, use unregulated field trials to rapidly advance and develop genomics applications. Miracle products create widespread public acceptance among those who can afford them, despite genomic accidents and uncertainties.

Genomics for All – Genomics is successfully implemented, with wise and participatory management of the risks and side effects. A consensus emerges not only on how genomics should be implemented, but also on the type of society that genomics should serve. Genomics plays an important role in building a global society dedicated to improving equity and sustainability.

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#3 Bruce Klein

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Posted 18 December 2003 - 07:05 AM

Genetic or Microvita Transformation:
New Futures ahead

The conventional view of the future assumes that life will keep on getting better. Income will go up, houses will increase in value, new technologies will make life better for all, even if in the short run some of us have to retrain. Our children's lives will improve. To be sure, there will be difficult times, but challenges will be solved, either through government or through entrepreneurial activity. Australia and other OECD nations will remain fair societies, where the most vulnerable will be taken care of.

This incremental view of the future is being challenged with claims that we are in the midst of the emergence of a post-industrial knowledge economy, a postmodern future. Indeed, this is a time of many "posts", meaning that the new era we are in is still being created, its outlines not yet clear, the institutional arrangements (what will government look like, who will watch over whom) still being sorted out.

Deeper changes

But perhaps the transformation is even deeper, challenging not just industrialism, but the entire rise of capitalism and the long term ascension of Western civilization, the Colombian era.

Nano-technologies and artificial intelligence might make production on a scale never before possible. Of course, these technologies are not yet on line but we are seeing hints of a post-scarcity society, challenging the idea that poverty will always be with (well at least because of technological reasons).

Smarter markets, meaning all products bar-coded with complete pricing details (how much the Indonesian worker was paid, how many trees were cut down, how much the middle-man made) will soon be possible, allowing consumers to vote with their dollars. Standards will then continue their transformation from merely the product's physical quality (what it looks like, is it safe and safely made) to its functional quality (how well it does what it claims to do) to its context (ethical quality).

By giving accurate information to consumers, the Internet could level the inequalities of capitalism, creating a giant peoples market. Capitalism could also transform through another depression, a global one once the speculative bubble of the world's financial markets finally bursts.

Equally transformative is the rise of multiculturalism. Taken to its full extent it shatters any notion of one culture, one state, one knowledge system, and one view of science. Can nations adequately organize the emergent differences being created, the vision a world of many cultures – a gaia of civilizations – of an ecology of different worldviews?

Proudly negotiating the tensions between the local and the universal (between feudal and empire/world church), even if the passport office remains its power to deport, the nation-state as the sole holder of power has entered a terminal process. Whether it will take 50 years or a hundred, we know well that revolutions from below (nongovernmental organizations), revolutions from above (international institutions), revolutions from capital (globalism), revolutions of culture (new ways of seeing self and other, of boundaries) and revolutions of technology (air travel, the Net) all make the naiton-state deeply problematic. Of course, the Hansons, the Milosevics, the brahmins and mullahs will not disappear. With no place to hold onto, they will fight until the bitter end, hoping that enough of us will retain sentiments of ethno-nationalism, of patriotism (and be willing to kill for it). They will hope to transform the quite legitimate concerns of individuals fearing change, corporate control, foreigners and loss of jobs into a politics of exclusion, of attacking the other.

Governance

What world is likely to result from these historical revolutions in governance? There are a range of historical-structural possibilities. Either one religious system dominates creating a world church, temple or mosque or one nation dominates creating a world empire. The former is unlikely as reality has become too fragmented. Neither christians nor muslims (or buddhists) are likely to convert en mass tomorrow, even if Jesus, the madhi, or amida buddha return. The problem of universally recognizing God is not likely to be solved in the year 2000, even if the Redeemer does return.

A world empire is difficult given the democratic impulse. The only nation currently vying for the job is caught by its own democratic participatory language. Disney and Microsoft are far more likely victors than the US state department, irrespective of what conspiracy theorists in Belgrade, Baghdad, Beijing and Kuala Lumpur believe.

But can the world capitalist economy – the third alternative - remain the hegemonic definer of identity? It has flourished because the economy has been global, expanding, while identity has been national, fixed, and thus has politics. With the nation in steep trouble, can a world economy with national identity politics continue? Localist – the fourth alternative - movements hope to capture the spaces being created by the loss of national identity. However, in their attempts to be authentically local, to challenge corporatism, they find themselves forced to link with other environmental, spiritual, labour, organizations. Cyberlobbying, the politics on the Net, too, forces them into global space indeed, all forces do. Localism only succeeds when it becomes global.

Globalisms

In this sense while we are half-way through the first phase of globalization, that is, of capital, phase two is likely to be the globalization of labour, Marx's dream all along. If capital can travel freely, whey not labour? Already, elite intellectual labour does, and soon other forms will as well. At the very least information the conditions of labour will via "the smart products method" become global. The next wave will be the multicultural. News – not the details of reporting but what we report about - will begin to flow not just downwards from Hollywood, New York and London upwards as well. Already, the best newspapers are those that include the feeds of many cultures. The Pakistani paper, The News, for example, far exceeds any reporting The New York Times might manage, largely, as it is weaker, and thus to survive gets feeds from Arab, South Asian, East Asian and Western sources. Not just news, but ideas, language, culture are beginning to filter all around, and even if Murdock is likely to standardize, still standardization is being challenged throughout the world. Customization is the likely future, technology allows it so, and postmodernism provides the cultural legitimacy for it. The search for authenticity in postmodern times, even if largely about style, forces a questioning of one's once presumed universal values. To question: the male, western, technocratic, linear, capitalist basis of reality. History books (why are muslims seen only as threats, why is the Pacific, the water continent seen as irrelevant?) and children's stories are all being deconstructed (why are witches constantly portrayed as evil?) and seen as particular of a worldview (Europe defining what is true, good and beautiful), and not as universal (for more on this, see: www.others.com). Facts come to be through narratives, or at the very least, what meanings we give to the facts change.

The final phase of globalization is likely to be a world security force, inklings of which we are already seeing.

With empire, one church, localism and a world capitalist economy around nation-states nearly impossible to sustain, what this means is that we will soon move to a world government system with strong localist tendencies, with thousands of bio-regions. The guiding ethic will be a move from strategy as our foremost paradigm to that of health and healing (of negotiating reality, difference, of reconciliation, and of having a big stick, ie the world security force) along with a neo-Magna Carta guaranteeing the right of culture, language and income.

The details are terribly important and burdensome, and how the Chinese will get along with the Americans is difficult to predict (just as the modern era was not possible to articulate from the feudal), but the structural forces are such that the only solution to the future is that. Many hope for a world governance system with strong localism. But this is unlikely as localist systems alone do not survive because they get taken over. It is not love alone that will create this new world system.

Aspirations

That said, aspirations for what people all over the world fall into three scenarios. The first is the globalist scenario. A jet plane for each and every; the capacity to speak many languages; multicultural; postmodern; Net-hip, and no more scarcity. The second is the organic scenario. Community and connecting with others is far more important. Relationship is not just about communication but it is a way of knowing. Slowing time down from the fast, always-one, always-everywhere, globalist world is a priority. Good sex, good food, and regular exercise and meditation also rank high. The image of the future is that of self-reliance electronically and spiritually (through the medium of microvita, Indian Philosopher P. R. Sarkar's notion of the basic units of life). The third scenario is the collapse, the return of Mad Max, the end of capitalism, tidal waves galore, escaped viruses (of the internet and biological types), airborne AIDs, and thank god for it since we have collectively sinned - mixed species, mixed marriages - forgotten what reality is really about. The aspiration dimension is that after the collapse, a moral order, with a strong father figure, returns.

There is a generational aspect to the future as well. Generation X is concerned about ethics, about the environment, about others. The globalist scenario is loved by the .Com generation. Growing up where difference is essential, they surf culture and the Net.

But there is more to the globalist scenario than just the freeing of capital and information. Indeed, that is why many believe we the transformation we are witnessing is far more fundamental than the victory of liberalism, the end of industrialism, and even the ascension of progress and the West.

End of Nature

For the first time we are on the verge of changing nature. Technology is the verge of the rapid redesign of evolution itself. Imagine a hand, writes information evolutionist Susantha Goonatilake, wearing a glove, writing with a pen. The hand represents the stability of evolution, our body constant over time; the glove represents culture, our meaning systems, our protection, our method of creating shared spaces and creating a difference between us and nature; and the pen, technology, representing our effort to create, to improve, to change culture and nature. While the traditional tension was between technology and culture with evolution "stable", now the pen (technology) has the potential to turn back on the hand and redesign it, making culture but technique, a product of technology. Thus the traditional feedback loop of culture and technology with biology the stable given is about to be transformed.

Evolution ceases to be something that happens to us but becomes directed. Add the Internet revolution, and suddenly we have information and genetic technologies or IGTs. Through the web we'll be able to order children. But isn't this far far away? Not say geneticists such as Leroy Hood, William Gates Professor of Molecular Biotechnology and Bioengineering. He argues that we are in the midst of a dramatic paradigm shift in the sciences, specifically the ascendancy of biology and the movement from hypothesis-based science to discovery science. Once the human genome is mapped, the first stage of application will be genetic prevention, the friendly visit to the local genetic doctor (or genedoctor.com). This is something we all would agree to, well, except the disabled, who now find themselves in a double whammy, says David Turnbull, made irrelevant by globalism, now they will be soon as the genetic discards of history, to be forever removed, like a bulldozed slum. But as with all slums, they will come back, and in far more problematic forms.

But we can now engineer intelligence, that is, genetic enhancement, making us all smarter and thus be able to deal with the externalities we create. If needed, we can make some of us stupider to do the dirty work. But ideally the dirty work will be done by the robots. And if the robots are not quite ready, the traditional solution of immigration remains. Indeed, for the West with rapid ageing soon to challenge economic growth, immigration will decide with OECD nations prosper and which decline. The ones that let in young Asians and Africans will have bright futures, others will slip away, lag behind. However, along with immigration there are two other possibilities. One: increase production through the Net. Two: create new humans, genetically.

Thus, after genetic enhancement, genetic recreation. The issue of whether we should do this, that is, ethics, unfortunately remains the endnote to the science and technology revolution. When you are changing the very nature of nature, why let a bit of ethics comes in the way between old and new species.

And ultimately that is what it will soon be about. Once genetic inequality becomes a main issue – that is the right to genetic enhancement – the world state will come in and regulate not if we should have baby factories but that they are safe and nicely air-conditioned.

Can anything be done to avoid the baby-factory future, or is the conflation between Big Science, Big Business, State, and our own materialistic urges so strong that the future will be one where we exist in not an ecology of types of life, but one where "we" as natural humans will be circumspect. Doyne Farmer of the famous Sante Fe Institute describes it in these apocalyptic terms:

If we fail in our task as creators (creating our successors), they may indeed be cold and malevolent. However, if we succeed, they maybe glorious, enlightened creatures that far surpass us in their intelligence and wisdom. It is quite possible that, when the conscious beings of the future look back on this earth, we will be most noteworthy, not in and of ourselves, but rather for what we gave rise to. Artificial life is potentially the most beautiful creation of humanity.

Along with Nature, reality, truth and sovereignty are equally contentious.

Reality once given, is now made. As we learn in Blade Runner, the toy maker to the question of what do you do, says. "I make friends," meaning not relationship and communion but the manufacture of others.

Once we knew what was real, now we have the virtual. What is maya and what is not. The Matrix ceases to be entertainment becoming a profound critique of what is to be.

Truth has already been deconstructed. Postmodernists, feminists, postcolonial theorists have rampaged across the globe questioning the epistemic basis of modernity, leaving all in tatters.

And sovereignty is already long gone, not just of the nation, but of the self. We have become many selves, many identities, numerous communities. While some hold on to the 9/5 job, living in the Pleasantville of work and home, others have become far more fluid, travelling in many spaces, many cultures.

Genetics or Microvita?

Where then is home? Where in the future is our resting space? And who will create it? Will it be those who are part of the current system, those in the Continued growth model of the future? Government leaders and corporate CEOs? Or will it be the "bedouins", those imagining a more organic connected future, those outside of official power. Will the current bedouin members and memes of the social movements create a new future. Will their challenge for new rights (for humans, animals and plants), for gender partnerships (womanists and feminists), for spirituality (seeking to transcend religion and secularism, finding meaning in a lived relationship with the infinite) and for social activism (a moral not amoral economy and politics) and against 500 years of continued growth be successful?

But instead of the bedouins, the "others" – steeped in ancient cyclical time - the likely future remains that of speed, the teflon postmodern self, and our genetic recreated offspring, the double helix generation to come. They imagine a future with no limits and have the wealth to create it.

Are there any limits to the technological changes ahead? Gordon Moore, founder of Intel – and Moore's law (that the number of devices on a piece of silicon doubles every year or two), when asked about the pace of change says:.

We're working with feature sizes that are so small, they're hard to
imagine—you could say that the features are about the size of a … virus, …We currently use visible light to etch components on the semiconductors, but now we're getting down to wavelengths for which essentially no materials are transparent. You can't make lenses any more. We're looking at three major alternatives to go beyond what we do now—X-rays, electron beams, and something called extreme ultraviolet … The next problem we run across is the fact that materials are made out of atoms. I don't see a way around that one.

But perhaps the solution to these limits will be from outside the material, outside our expectations. P.R. Sarkar writes that the very nature of reality must be ideational and physical at the same time – microvita. At the crudest form they are viruses, at the deepest, they are pockets of energy that can be used to direct evolution, that can carry information. Like the geneticists, he believes we are directing evolution but it is being directed through our creative collective unconscious, through our aspirations for a different world. These aspirations become not mere visions of dreamers but the program for, at least, our social, if not, biological evolution.

Which future will it be then? Incremental Change? The globalist artificial society? The organic global community? Or a collapse followed by a strong moral order?

Will the technocrats or humanists win this one, or are we creating a world where neither one has the current metaphorical capacity to recognize the future?
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Sohail Inayatullah, Professor with the IMC, Unesco Chair at the University of Trier, and visiting academic at Queensland University of Technology is the author of numerous books on the future of knowledge, culture and technology. Publications in 1999 include, Situating Sarkar: Tantra, Macrohistory and Alternative Futures; Transcending Boundaries; Transforming Communication; and Islam, Postmodernism and Other Futures.

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