Then you failed the exercise.
The point was to illustrate 'fear' is omnipresent when you look for reasons to 'fear' something.
Ignorance leads to fear. Fear leads to hatred. Hatred leads to the Dark side of the... oh wait, never mind that last part.
Learn. Think. Understand.
One should not 'fear' bio-engineering or even any single region of knowledge, one should be aware though of the limitations, the hubris and behaviors of the humans who practice it. To do otherwise risks following along Luddite patterns, fearful of what they do not understand while ignoring the actions of others, whom they should be wary of.
There are many things one can do with metal that is considered "unethical" -- why not take a look into the usage of any tool towards what you perceive as negative? Why not notice that there are "metal" (reassigned as "not biological") objects that can destroy great swathes of land?
All I see present here is someone being fearful. Not being understanding.
A tool is only as used by the user.
The point was to illustrate 'fear' is omnipresent when you look for reasons to 'fear' something.
Ignorance leads to fear. Fear leads to hatred. Hatred leads to the Dark side of the... oh wait, never mind that last part.
Learn. Think. Understand.
One should not 'fear' bio-engineering or even any single region of knowledge, one should be aware though of the limitations, the hubris and behaviors of the humans who practice it. To do otherwise risks following along Luddite patterns, fearful of what they do not understand while ignoring the actions of others, whom they should be wary of.
There are many things one can do with metal that is considered "unethical" -- why not take a look into the usage of any tool towards what you perceive as negative? Why not notice that there are "metal" (reassigned as "not biological") objects that can destroy great swathes of land?
All I see present here is someone being fearful. Not being understanding.
A tool is only as used by the user.