Revista de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales
© 2022. Universidad del Zulia
ISSN 1012-1587/ ISSNe: 2477-9385
Depósito legal pp. 198402ZU45
Portada: Allí estás!
Artista: Rodrigo Pirela
Medidas: 50 x 30 cm
Técnica: Mixta sobre tela
Año: 2011
Año 38, Regular No.97 (2022): 14-19
ISSN 1012-1587/ISSNe: 2477-9385
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7486057
Revista de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales. FEC-LUZ
EDITORIAL
LOOK AT BIOETHICS FROM THE FOUNDATIONS OF
PHILOSOPHY
What the Presocratics have to tell us
Gilbert Hottois, that swordsman of the magic word that
transmutes thought into action, has said with stupefying realism that
"philosophy came late to bioethics". This expression, said in a
decontextualized way, still reflects a world of circumstances that, around
the tasks that philosophy has always had as its north since its Greek
invention, reveals to us that the world of human life is always blurred
by sieves that are incomprehensible from action and reflection. Thus, the
relations between theory and praxis have come under the scrutiny of
philosophical thinking, especially when science was only concerned with
representing reality "as it is". The scientific method promoted the art of
representing reality in such a way that it came to be assimilated to the
"mirror of nature".
The late arrival of Philosophy to this appointment summoned by
the not so new interdiscipline that is Bioethics, means that this world
devised by the Hellenic culture did not imagine the transition from the
representation of the world to its transformation through technoscientific
interventionism. In simple language, it is not the same thing to represent
as to transform the world, a question that has been turning around at
great speed since the middle of the 20th century, especially with the
advances in molecular biology and quantum physics. We have already
commented on this aspect in previous editorials.
In these lines, I want to highlight the problem of temporality in
which philosophy is involved as a reflective task on a core issue of the
present century, populated as we know by technological devices and
creations that are not only the product of the transformation of nature,
but of the dynamics of the transformation of matter that they themselves
are the protagonists.
From this perspective of the late philosophical reflection, we think
contrary to what the Belgian master suggests, but let us be clear that this
opposition is only in one aspect. Although the dazzle caused by the
techno-scientific advances has meant an exponential increase in the
reflections that current philosophy sets itself as a task, it is also true that
we can find some significant elements from this philosophical thinking in
the Hellenic culture; or, better said, in the pre-Socratic culture, with its
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unifying thinking of the Universe, especially if we look at bioethics as an
interdiscipline that assumes its object of study in a different way from the
modernizing project of science.
As we have said on other occasions, bioethics is rooted in its work
from the fields of ethics, politics, law and science and technology, since it
emerges as a bridge "between the sciences and the humanities", as Potter
would say, it precisely spreads a mantle of interdisciplinary reflection on
the human endeavor. From this perspective, Bioethics is not only a
reflection from biomedicine, but also from all those currents of thought
and technology capable of transforming the world of human life,
especially emphasizing its reflections from the "humanities", as the
oncologist expresses it. This is where philosophical reflection enters the
arena, as it is at its foundations.
In accordance with the above, it is a matter of looking at reality
from the transit that goes from the representation and production of the
image of the world, to the reconstruction of a new order of non-existent
things, insofar as they are not the "given" of classical philosophy.
Therefore, it is not that philosophy has arrived late to the task of
reflecting on bioethics; what happens is that the technoscientific action
hid from the philosopher the mountain range that would ensue with the
transformation of matter that technoscience signifies. Philosophy did not
imagine it due to the separation between philosophy and science since
modernity, a unity that was present in the pre-Socratic philosophers.
Earlier we had also given some criteria regarding the contributions of
Heraclitus' philosophy to science, especially to the current social sciences.
The ideas of change and movement are keys to understand not only these
reflective aspects of science, but also of the reality they deal with.
The core issue in relation to this argument is that, reality being
one and multiple in Heraclitus' conception, this reality is now visualized
to the point that his understanding of the whole is just that: to
understand that the universe is one and multiple. And when this thinker,
together with Anaxagoras, Anaximenes and Anaximander, reveal to us
the unity of the Universe, his cosmology embraces from this techno-
scientific diachronic look to all that is. These are the lessons we are
receiving from classical philosophy to understand the ontological and
practical issues of the current techno-scientific endeavor. That is to say,
that the reflection on life and human "circumstances" that bioethics deals
with, reflecting from the theoretical and practical disciplines, is already a
subject of philosophy. In this sense, we think that the aforementioned
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Belgian Master could have revised his statement about the timelessness
of philosophy in the context of bioethics, although he may have said it in
a direct and operative sense; but it has always been so: "Minerva's owl
takes flight when the day has been lived".
Hegel's metaphor logically refers to philosophical thought; the owl
of Minerva, represented by philosophy, sinks its foundations on what has
happened: philosophical thought "operates" on lived life. And this is
what we think of when we say that bioethics is a reflection on the current
world of technoscience, which is the world of science elevated to the
power of its own transformation of the natural and human world (that is,
under the relationship of matter and spirit; of soul and body). The
philosophy that is assumed as a reflection on bioethics, in the sense of
Hottois, refers to the fact that the transformation of the world through
technique does not seem to have interested the philosopher. And this is
precisely a core issue. Technoscience, understood as the techné of these
times, did not have much place in philosophical thought, according to
this line of thought of the Belgian philosopher.
However, in accordance with the Heraclitean postulates, we see
that, from this perspective, philosophy has had much to express
regarding the transformation of the world, only that the philosophies that
have become followers of the current adverse to movement and change,
that is, of that which states that the world does not change, as expressed
by Parmenides, took sides, imposing a deterministic conception of reality,
with its positivist method: "That which is, is; that which is not, is not and
will not be". Everything that exists is already given. Hence, from this
conception there is no room for the current transformations of natural
and human matter, as occurs from biogenetics (this disrupts the
foundations even of the human soul, as the Mexican philosopher Juliana
Gonzalez Valenzuela puts it).
Therefore, the discussion through the Presocratics comes to
enrich the philosophical task of bioethics, since the conception and image
of the ancient world, now comes to coincide with the image and
conception of the world brought to us by technoscience, and,
consequently, as a task of Bioethics. Regarding the latter, it is worth
mentioning the work that philosophy has been doing as a task about
the transformation of the world in which the current technique
consists. However, it is good to note that none of the classical and
modern philosophers referred to bioethics as such discipline, but to the
consequences that the world of technology brings to human evolution.
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The cases cited by Paulina Rivero Weber (2021) of Nietzsche and
Heidegger are eloquent; both philosophers articulated their perspectives
of technical reason as a fundamental element to understand the process of
transformation; the former referring to instrumental rationalism, and the
latter, referring to the humanism of being. In the face of both positions,
we must also point out Ortega's reference, with his famous Meditation on
Don Quixote in which he wielded his also famous definition of "man" and
his "circumstances".
The other reference that I want to highlight in these lines, are the
approaches about the philosophical work around bioethics that the
aforementioned Master Juliana González Valenzuela teaches us. In a very
special way, she presents a retrospective about the intervention of
philosophy in the world of transformations, starting from the
conceptions of the Presocratic Philosophers. Let us highlight just one of
the multiple details that the aforementioned philosopher reflects on this
enigmatic world of antiquity, a sphere from which we must always think
philosophy: let us remember the special look that Heidegger makes when
unraveling the "forgotten question", that is, "the question of being"; a
question that is precisely what we are dealing with today from this critical
idea of the transformed reality that technoscience presents us with.
This idea that we want to highlight is the question about the
genomic revolution, since it is setting the guidelines of a new
transformed Universe; a world of life in which the relationships between
matter and form that make being are no longer seen in the same way: the
genomic question is permeating the interstices of reality in the infinite
world of DNA and the double helix that represents it. The capacity to
transform life through the recombinant technique of the genome leads us
to understand that the unity represented by the gene not only becomes
plurality by reproducing itself through the reduplication and binary
combination of the code that is embedded in its "program", but that this
process, which is natural in Nature, introduces elements of
transformation by means of that technique of intervention of the
genome (the recombinant technique).
This revelation of molecular biology, says González Valenzuela
(2017), shows us that DNA, in addition to the possibilities of
transforming itself by means of human intervention, has existed
throughout the eternity of life. Every living being possesses it, so that this
is the unity of which Heraclitus and the other Milesian thinkers speak to
us. This is a long- standing vision of the relationship between life and
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nature, which Bioethics deals with, but it was not until the middle of the
twentieth century that we were able to put it into scientific evidence. The
whole that is the genome is also the unity from which it proceeds.
Everything is one, and everything moves; the movement of the genome,
translated into natural combination but also into genetic engineering, is
precisely the intervening factor that the Greeks of the time could not see.
But they did imagine the relationship between ontos and ethos: between
being and good custom; scientific Modernity, by separating itself from
this premise, determined a course in the history of science that declares
nature as an object of intervention based on the power generated by
scientific action.
The that stands out from all this, is that the current state of the
art of biotechnology, not only invites us, but forces us to take that
attitude of the Presocratics: "astonishment" and "wonder". And this is
precisely because the matter of which all living beings are made, favors
the generation of the vital energy that is the soul; that is why it is found in
the foundations of all this scaffolding of the relationship between reality
and action; between ontology and ethics, what we have already expressed:
that biogenetics and technosciences, by generating new forms of matter,
even living matter, generates a new sense of the relationship with that
energy called soul, which Aristotle also three-dimensioned (vegetative,
animal and rational); the relationship between being and ought to be is
deeply reflected.
In this way, it can be seen that the relationships fostered by
ancient philosophical thought have already brought us the original
reflections necessary to understand the role of bioethics in the face of
techno-scientific development. There are new paths to follow from this
line of thought, but what is not new is precisely the idea that bioethics
has always been present in philosophical thought. The owl of Minerva,
before taking flight at the end of the day, had to nest in order to
reproduce its next generation. Only, unlike other birds, it hatches its
offspring in broad daylight, as does the techno-science of these
technically challenging times; however, at night, it flies at the level of the
stars.
Dr. José Vicente Villalobos Antúnez/Editor-in-Chief
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REFRENCIAS
GONZÁLEZ VALENZUELA, Juliana (2017). Bíos. El cuerpo del
alma y el alma del cuerpo. Editorial Fondo de Cultura
Económica, México.
HOTTOIS, Gilbert (2001). ¿Qué es la bioética? Universidad El
Bosque, Colombia.
RIVERO WEBER, Paulina (2020). Introducción a la bioética.
Editorial Fondo de Cultura Económica, México.
UNIVERSIDAD
DEL ZULIA
Revista de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales
Año 38, N° 97 (2022)
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