Revista de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales. FEC-LUZ
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.