It has been said that no new technology has ever gone unused. Clearly, the new technology of genetic engineering will be no exception. Already it is being utilized to change the genetic blueprint of bacteria, plants and some animals, and every advance is scrutinized for possible application in man. This new science is changing forever the way we think of life, not just at the molecular level, but at all levels of organization.The intent of this book is to explore, in the format of a novel, the choices, as well as the lack of choice, that are presented by this exceptional biotechnology. As genetic engineering matures over the next years and decades, it will become feasible to engineer the genes of future generations of mankind with ever-increasing precision. While previous seminal advances in technology such as written language, mathematics, electricity, manned flight, nuclear energy, and the computer have all given man astounding and powerful new tools, it is genetic engineering that will give man, for the first time, the tools to redesign man himself.
Despite the extraordinarily high stakes, recognized in the National Institutes of Health's decision to publicly disseminate proposals for scientific research in this area, the national debate has, to this point, been limited and unfocused. It is hoped that this book will help inform members of the general public of the nature of genetic engineering and of its potential and probable uses so that the societal decisions, which eventually must be made, can be based on reason and understanding, and result in the greatest possible good.
About the Author: William C. Klingensmith III grew up near Pittsburgh, PA, attended Cornell University in Ithaca, NY and then Cornell's College of Medicine in New York City. He completed an internship in medicine at the University of Oregon School of Medicine in Portland, OR, a residency in radiology at the University of Colorado School of Medicine in Denver, CO, and a fellowship in nuclear medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, MD.
Then he returned to the University of Colorado School of Medicine as the head of nuclear medicine for seven years. He then joined Radiology Imaging Associates, a large academically oriented private practice radiology group in Denver. After 25 years in private practice he returned to the University of Colorado School of Medicine to again head nuclear medicine.
Dr. Klingensmith is married to Georgeanna J. Klingensmith, a pediatric endocrinologist. They met when they were both in training at the University of Colorado School of Medicine.