Team:Paris Saclay/Ethics/About Life Art Science

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It is also notable that the issues of art and life merge early, in philosophy as in the history of mankind. To separate them for a long time is as sterile as artificial. A scrupulous decomposition of tasks must not mask the proximity, even the sameness, of the two basis of our reflection. Art, for expemple, requiring the subjectivity of human beings, living creatures above all, is particularly dependent on the definition of life we choose.
It is also notable that the issues of art and life merge early, in philosophy as in the history of mankind. To separate them for a long time is as sterile as artificial. A scrupulous decomposition of tasks must not mask the proximity, even the sameness, of the two basis of our reflection. Art, for expemple, requiring the subjectivity of human beings, living creatures above all, is particularly dependent on the definition of life we choose.
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==Summary:==
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==Summary==
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I/ On the definition of a living being
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'''I.''' On the Definition of a Living Being
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II/ About Art and the expression of life-bound problems through Art
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III/ The human issue at the center of bio-art
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'''II.''' About Art and the Expression of Life-Bound Problems Through Art
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'''III.''' The Human Issue at the Center of Bio-Art
==On the definition of a living being==
==On the definition of a living being==

Revision as of 07:50, 14 October 2014

Contents

About Life, Art and Science

At the earliest stages of any reflection about BioArt, in general or in it's particular cases, it is necessary to adress the two issues – antediluvian and unsolvable – of Art and Life. Both must be answered on an arbitrary basis, in order to hope for fecund discussions. Nevertheless, to be sure that there is not a privileged answer, several contradictory approaches have to coexist.

Following the completion of this preliminary but non-negligible work, the real issues about bio-art will come by themselves. We easily foresee that they will appeal not only to the Art and the Living themes, but also to the harder questions of ethics, laws and religion, that, in the absence of sufficient time, we will only debate in a cursory maner.

It is also notable that the issues of art and life merge early, in philosophy as in the history of mankind. To separate them for a long time is as sterile as artificial. A scrupulous decomposition of tasks must not mask the proximity, even the sameness, of the two basis of our reflection. Art, for expemple, requiring the subjectivity of human beings, living creatures above all, is particularly dependent on the definition of life we choose.

Summary

I. On the Definition of a Living Being

II. About Art and the Expression of Life-Bound Problems Through Art

III. The Human Issue at the Center of Bio-Art

On the definition of a living being

Men have been obsessed by the distinction between life and unlife since time began for us. The animism we can still find in many primeval and current cults, sometimes pushed to view everything in this world as life, shows how serious men are in their efforts to distinguish what things they are similar with from the things they feel deeply different : a dog and a rock. Whatever evaluation criteria we use, an undoubtedly living being seems to appear that proves them deficient. Therefore, several great minds have been looking for a definition based on abstraction in order to embrace the whole of life in one concept. The summary that follows has no claim to be exhaustive and only claims to give an overview of the evolution of these issues throughout the course of history.

One of the first elaborated and still documented points of view, seminal up until the XIXth century, is the Aristotelian one. It supposes each living being has a « soul » (anima), which at that time had nothing divine nor transcendental. In Aristotle, the soul did not inhabit a body but was a form of the body ; « The soul is the first actuality of a natural body that is potentially alive » (Aristotle, On the soul). He distinguished vegetal souls, «  this means that each of the segments (of the vegetal) has a soul in it identical in species »(Aristotle, On the soul), and the souls of men and animals which are expressed by the power of sense-perception and self-motion.

This primeval point of view did not take into account all the micro-organisms, unknown at the time, but it may encompass them. We can find in several current thesis, in particular in the vitalist ones, a strong aristotelian influence. The religious concept of the soul and of life in general in the Catholic religion has even been influenced by scholars like Saint Thomas Aquinas.

The next approach is also prior to microscopes. It has the advantage of including all possible living forms and the defect of being quite inadequate to distinguish in practice between life and unlife. It is the pure mechanistic approach typical of Descartes. It is worth noting that this approach already existed, in a remarkably well developed form for it's time, in Epicure, that conceived the idea of atom dear to Democrite.

«Nor will this appear at all strange to those who are acquainted with the variety of movements performed by the different automata, or moving machines fabricated by human industry, and that with help of but few pieces compared with the great multitude of bones, muscles, nerves, arteries, veins, and other parts that are found in the body of each animal. Such persons will look upon this body as a machine made by the hands of God, which is incomparably better arranged, and adequate to movements more admirable than is any machine of human invention» - René Descartes, Discourse on the method.

The Approach of Descartes, albeit settled in the Catholic religion of it's time, only makes a difference between men, whose have souls – in a Catholic meaning here –, and the rest. Animals, and all other living things are thus machines. For Descartes, there are man-made machines, and life, the machines made by God whose are, in the quote above : « incomparably better arranged, and adequate to movements more admirable than is any machine of human invention ». The recent advances of synthetic biology, for example the complete and artificial construction of a functional genome ( see Craig Venter et al results), cast doubt on the Cartesian view of life. The problem with this idea, or maybe it's strength, is that it don't distinguish the simplest organisms from the erratic machines produced by the laws of physics. By extrapolating from the Cartesian thought, the well-oiled machine of the water cycle, or of the changing of seasons is not less living that replication cycle in virus and primordial bacteria. The Cartesian approach solve the problem of the definition of life because it denies the problem, deciding only between humans granted a soul and machines or inert things.

The definition of life by entropy is significantly later, but it occurs before the birth of the fathers of thermodynamics and evolution in organisms, Ludvig Boltzmann(1844-1906) and Charles Darwin(1809-1882), in Marie François Xavier Bichat(1771-1802). The latter, sometimes regarded as a vitalist ( something Foucault refuses), consider life as mysterious principle which fight against an inert environment. He describe life by : « All the forces that fight against death ». This definition that can seem like a tautology must be understood with an entropic point of view, considering death being an inexorable future of withering away. Life has thus no sense without the perspective of death and the high lighting of an inerte environment (and no an inorganic one). The definition of Bichat has the advantage of discribing life as a movement and by the way time act on living beings. Life shall therefore be the temporary exception to the second law of thermodynamics (The entropy of the universe tends to a maximum). This definition is barely not subject to exceptions and classify without ambiguity Craig Venter machine as life, because, while being artificial, this genome fight against death and entropy with an incontestable efficacy.

This idea comes up again soon after in a new light, with the evolutionary cause, purely mechanistic, served independently by Jean-Baptiste Pierre Antoine de Monet, knight of Lamarck and Charles Darwin. Lamarck found biology as we know it, using a theory that tend to consider life as a notable case of a chemical system. For Lamarck, human beings, and all other life forms, are nothing but machines, made up of particules determined by the laws of physics and chemicals. For him, evolution of species leading to the adaptation to the environment is a theoretical necessity. Darwin read Larmarck but did not use his work that much in the developpement of a more qualitative theory on the evolution of species by the survival of the more adapted to a given set of environmental conditions ( it is worth noting that the famous book of Darwin was not only named On the origin of species but On the origin of species by means of natural selection, or the preservation of favoured races in the struggle for life ). The evolutionist and mechanistical thought do not define living beings by their fight against death anymore, like Bichat used to, but by their capacity of evolution. The point of view went from the fight against entropy at an individual scale to the fight against entropy at the scale of the species or the taxons. Living machines are thus distinguishable from human machines by this criterium of reproduction and surviving of the species. Here again, the bacterial machine of Craig Venter keep his place among living beings.

Nietzsche, still based on a mechanistical point of view, refused this definition of life centered on the evolution and the adaptability of organisms. In accordance with his thought in general, he consider life as the expression of a will of power and assimilation. An organism or a species that does nothing but maintain itself in existence, whithout growing or strengthening, will be for him a declining thing that is not life. The machines produced by synthetic biology would be for Nietzsche machines or living beings depending on the way we treat them. They would be machines as long as their growth would be controled and their existence exploited, but from the moment their liberty and independence would be restored, assuming they would survive and grow, they would have for him all the aspects of living beings.

We seems to find, more recently, some examples of vitalism, like in Michel Foucault:

«… death was the only possibility of giving life a positive truth. The irreducibility of the living to the mechanical or chemical is secondary only in relation to the fundamental link between life: and death. Vitalism appears against the background of this `mortalism'.» - Michel Foucault, Birth of the clinic

But a careful analysis of Foucault and his contemporaries lead to think that it is a “superficial” vitalism : the consideration of an irreductible vital element as a consequence of life rather than a cause. The previous quote is best understood in the light of this passage from The order of things:

«vitalism and its attempt to define the specificity of life are merely the surface effects of those archaeological events» - Michel Foucault, The order of things.

Over the last decades, countless contributions have been made, often based on past thinkers, and it would be vain to try to summarise them here. We can however note the “selfish gene” theory, proposed by Richard Dawkins, that put genes at the center of evolution. Life would thus be reduced at an abstract piece of information, coded in organic molecules. Evolution and surviving would not matter anymore, only the potential of the information held in the gene would have an importance. This point of view is enforced by the experiences of Thomas S. Ray, researcher in ecology, who simulated bacterial and viral evolution with a computer program capable of auto-replication. The conception of life as perennial genetic information included the virtual creatures of Thomas Ray.

About Art and the Expression of Life-Bound Problems Through Art

The definition of art do not raise the same issues that the life one, in particular because the question of life do not have as much financial impact. We will not present here the complete history of Art, with it's artists. The moder times have so much splited up art and denied the legacy of it's history – through the modern art especially – that our reflection do not need to involve a precise chronology. It is still interesting to underline the fact that art, very related to the social, religious and political context, has been above all a form of expression to the problems of it's time. It has firstly been figurative, and this until the early Xxth century. Just the method and the subjects changed, very sensitive to fashion trends, evolving of the mores and pioneer artists influence.

But a big technical and esthetical change like impresionism seems anecdotal alongside the renewal brought by, for example, the surrealism. Art is at least one million year old, but the emergence of abstraction and intent as a visible and primary engine in art is recent, and we can, with some boldness, locate it in the early Xxth century. The consumer society has also caused the growth of applied arts whose are, amongst others, graphism, design, architechture, illustration and advertising communication. Although not considered art by many people, these ones have tremendously influenced the so-called true Art, as can be seen the Pop Art of Andy Warrol or Roy Lichtenstein. Conversely, the art celebrated in expositions and museums influenced the applied art forms.

The entry into art, this second half of the XXth century, of a flock of charlatans raises in particular the question of easiness in art. The current and comonly agreed conception of art put the dessein at the center of artistic work, to the detriment of technique and aesthetics, opening the door to a sophistry of contengency of the worst kind : I am art because I say I am art and art is art because it comes from an intention of doing art. This Far-Ouest of modern aesthetics has widen the possibility of art and opened the way for a new form of creation : BioArt.

BioArt is a domain of fading borders and consensual in nature. The BioArtists community and it's followers define de facto what is BioArt and what is not. The widest definition of BioArt we can take is an Art about living beings. BioArt introduce living beings as subjects, materials and means. In the first case, we modify and expose living beings to raise questions about them, in the second case we use them like a new pigment, in the third one we use their symbolic role for a higher calling. If we assume we know what is Art, we need, in order to say what is BioArt, to know what is life. According to wheter we use one or an other definition of life, a virus will be or will not be a living being and a work based one viruses will or will not be a piece of BioArt. Whithout being that extreme, can we consider the spectacle of metallic machines reproducing life aspects as a BioArt work ? If we take the mecanisthical vision of life of the knight of Lamarck, all is machines more or less sophisticated and a work that shows a complex machine can be BioArt if the artistical intention of the work is to make BioArt. But for a vitalist natural life, modified and presented by man is necessary to a BioArt work, as otherwise the work would lack the indivisible vital element of life.

In facts, the most recognized BioArt works do not come from a new research of beauty through biotechnologies but from a deep need of polemic around disturbing topics. BioArtists often want to send a message, a fear or a concept. One of the most striking examples of these last years is the rabbit Alba of Eduardo Kac, green and fluorescent under ultraviolet light. This animal was not made with the purpose of revolutionizing beauty in figurative art, it's a message of fear and defiance addressed to the world.

BioArt should not be reduced to the use of science in art. Since the first color pigments, science has a role in the world of Art ; the rise of new advanced technologies in art is no more that the logical development of artistical technique. It is worth noting that in fireworks science play a major role. But fireworks are always intended to be beautiful, and even if they can express an idea, it's through beauty and in the purest artistical tradition, not in a disturbing or provocative way. BioArt is different. It doesn't seak for beauty or perfection.

BioArt that make itself known is emotional and alive. Instead of a result, a final scene, a BioArt work is a process, sometimes kind of out of control, submitted to the inherent randomness of biology. However, nothing kept this form of art to be like pyrotechnics, elctronic music, numerical drawing and all other form of art based on modern technology. If BioArt is polemical and symbolic, if it favours the process and not the results, it's because BioArt is an outlet for a polutation anguished by our power.

Art has always mirrored the anxieties of society. For a long time, these anxieties have had a face, so Art have been figurative. We depicted Heaven and Hell, death, wars, deseases... The renewals brought by the XXth century, like surrealism, were bound to the deep social upheaval of that time. This time, fear does not have a face. The anxieties that come from biotechnologies and in particular genetic engineering are inapropriate for the representations we are used to. The catharsis were incomplete. A fluorescent rabbit is a perfect way to express the anxiety about our new power : we can do it. We control the plan of fabrication of living beings, we can have an ear grafted on a human arm, we can change the colour of an animal and create chimeras.

The anxiety man express through BioArt goes beyond the fear of consequencies, and it is not just fear. There is also a great curiosity in BioArt, a curiosity about the future and the rethinking brought by biotechnologies. We wonder what will be the future in the light of what we currently know in biology.

That being said, to define BioArt as the Art that uses living beings is absurd, because it deprive us of an array of interesting mechanical works. Instead of an art with life, we should describe an art about life. We could define BioArt as the art that uses biotechnologies in order to speak about life and about the relations between mankind and life. Therefore, the definition of BioArt exempts itself from the definition we give of life, because BioArt have now as a subject the questions and the answers about the definition of life. The defect of this definition of BioArt is that it deprive us of purely aesthetic biologically assisted works. We can see these two approaches as two categories of BioArt. An art of life and about life, that is to said an art around life. With this conception of proximity with life and biotechnologies we can approach more closely the idea of BioArt, and it is what we will from now.

The Human Issue at the Center of Bio-Art

As we said, BioArt draw a part of it's energy in the new questions man is asking about himself. Mankind developped during the XXth Century a feeling of hatred mixed with admiration towerds itself. The conventional forms of Art could barely express that. If BioArt can do it, it's because it has a force of deed. BioArt is a high-technology act performed on a living being, highligthed from the beginning to the end : the stage of modern men realizing the part of their potentiel they are afraid off, proud off or fascinated by.

BioArt works principaly intend to deal with hasard, consequences, legitimacy and law. Often, one work deal with all these topics, like Alba the rabbit. If these issues have become essential, it's because biotechnologies are a cause of hasard, a source of consequencies, a mean of doing what we don't have the legitimacy for and an endless challenge for the legislature.

The issue of hasard and consequencies are the responsibility of risk management centers, like nuclear plants, chemistry, studies on nanomachines or the widely implanted electromagnetic devices. Philosophy do not have so much place in that.

However, the legitimacy and the law are closely bound to philosophy and, as we shall go on to examine, to abstract concept like the definition of life.

Man usually treats differently what is similar to him and what is different, for example he uses freely mining resources but have many more reservations when it comes to animals – as proves the existence of the Société protectrice des animaux. Therefore the life definition issue has a concrete importance for our society. Biotechnologies enable us to touch at the genome and to make living beings from nature do a planned task for thousands of generations. The techniques of a near future will enable the creation of a living being from inanimate matter. This organism will be deprived of history. BioArt is a strong way of striking non-scientist population with the legitimacy issues. Man ask himself how far he can modify living beings and what laws he must write about that. Thus, the definition of life is of tremendous importance. Wether or not artificial organisms will be considered living, this will shape a whole part of the industry of our near future.

Let us look at life from the purely mechanistical point of view of Descartes, Lamarck, La Mettrie and all those in history who have seen in the universe nothing else but the laws of physics applied to matter and energy.

Like all definitions, the life one will have an arbitrary character, because in the great heap of atoms and energy our universe is made off, there is no order but the one we see and no objects but the ones our mind can perceive, name and define. Thus we must choose the definition of life according to the ethics principle that will inform the upheavals in laws about life.

An article by Anna Deplazes and Mark Huppenbauer, Synthetic organisms and living machines, propose as basic criteria the composition, the origin, the development and the purpose. This hierarchy enable us to establish a sort of ladder between what is clearly alive and what is clearly not alive, whith a hazy border which hold the debates. This has the advantage of focusing the problem and the inconvenient of an anthropocentric point of view. The mere fact that origin is a criterion shows the human systematic trend of applying human criteria in every reflection. Man is a creature of history, who often judges the value something according to it's history instead of considering it's present and unbiased qualities. If the definition of a living beings has ethics laws and restrictions as consequencies, to base this definition on origin is as absurd as considering that a person born into slavery has no rights.

A debate on the laws about micro-organisms must disregard their origin and focus on their present and unbiased qualities. The judgment criteria for life shall, thus, be abstract ones. We can for example consider life as any entities capable of reproduction in an adequate environment. This simple definition include viruses and a whole array of computer programs capable of reproduction in a favorable numerical environment. We can, in an extreme way, consider a living being the sentence : write, then quote «write, then quote», if it is placed in a room with paper, pencils and thorough logicians. Being made of organic matter or not lose thus all importance, and that prevent us from a racism of composition. In a pure mechanistical point of view, wether a thing is made of iron or carbone should have no impact on the status of living being. Subsequently, we can expect of a living being a permanent metabolic activity, where metabolism would be define without reference at carbone and proteines. The question of viruses and computer programs become litigious, but this definition make more sense in a research of a basis for legislation about life. A virus spend it's existence inert like a rock and seems to be inapropriate for consideration and rights.

The more contencious cas is bacteria with minimal genome, made in order to serve humans their whole life. This problem is also marked by anthropomorphism. What we find disturbing in a living machine with controled genome, it's the history of that living being we would modify or create. If a living being is naturally willing to serve our species, because of the joint evolution of our two species, like many plants and the micro-organisms of our intestinal flora are, we will not ask ourselves any questions. It is also worth noting that domesticated dogs, genetically modified for thousand of years by evolutionary pressure from men and often incapable of surviving alone, do not bother anyone. We always focus on the history of beings. Excluding hasard and animal suffering considerations, the technique used to modify living beings has no importance. If modifying fruit trees for two thousand years in order to obtain a tree that relies on humans for it's surviving and uses all it's energy to produce our food is allowed, why would the same result obtained in two years with genetic engineering be an issue ? The question of the modification of life by man has nothing to do with biotechnologies in particular. It's a question about the action of human beings on their environment in general. We can note that the use of aphids by ants has never tormented anyone, and that the modification of nature from any other species than ours let us indifferent. Man, due to his capacity of reflection on his deeds, think about morals and ethics. His intelligence imposes upon him the burden of morals and he scourges himself for the extinctions he is responsible for. Some researchers defend the thesis that Methanosarcina bacteria would have caused the worst mass extinction in the history of life, the Permian-Triassic extinction event, about 252 million years ago ( desapearance of 95% of marine species and 70% of terrestrial species ). Following this study, we did not had a moral judgment on this bacterium. This shows how ethic problems with biotechnologies do not come from the acts themselves but from the confrontational relashionship we have with our intelligence.

It is what fall under the domain of art and give BioArt it's importance, it's relevance and it's power of alert and catharsis.

However, if we assume that vitalists are correct, and that there is in the living world as it existed before mankind a mysterious vital energy our creations can't have, then the debate change radically.

As we do not know what life is made of, we have to precautionary respect life. This mysterious common feature we have with life, the vital essence, is a good reason to apply anthropic principles in debates about life, because we assume without possible verification that livings beings have something in common with humans that demand for moderation and respect.

With this assumption of a common feature that unifies life, we do not have a problem of definition of life anymore, but a problem of understanding of life. Living beings are or are not living beings independently of us and our philosophy. However, the decision making about ethics and use of life is not simplier. Ethics about life can't be determined until all living beings are identified, because a judge can not judge organisms he know nothing about. Before taking any important decision, we must create, study and separate between life and unlife those living machines and synthetic organisms we can produce with computer sciences, biotechnologies and synthetic biology. There is thus a necessity of patience from the industrial sector and of a tremendous investment in fundamental research on artificial and modified micro-organisms. The experiences that will enable us to take decisions about bio-ethics could be forbiden in the future, but their execution in a first time is required. We can also apply a principle of moral precaution and refuse to investigate scientifically on those questions, like some country are doing in the topic of stem cells.

If living beings are recognised by the laws as holders of an inalienable right to be independent, the creation of minimal genomes will be possible only if these organisms are not considered alive. Therefore, the modification with genetic engineering of entire ecosystems is not only an issue of health and hasard, but raises also several moral questions.

The non-technological methods that modify environment, like evolutionary pressure or plant breeding can also become ilegal, but because living beings have a status and a need for respect and preservation, very invasive processes like genetic engineering or directed evolution in laboratories can be the subject for particular legislations.

BioArt is, here again, one of the best means to raise questions. The rabbit Alba of Eduardo Kac play a role on our empathy, being a pet, and lead us to the question of sudden modification of living beings.

However we choose the definition of life, it remains a problem of hierarchy in life. Comon sense lead to think that a monkey and a bacteria can not be subjects to the same laws when it comes to biotechnologies. From a mechanistical point of view, hierarchy in life must be based on a criterion, like inteligence, self-consciouness or feelings, but there is a great risk of anthropocentrism. From a vitalist's point of view, to rank living beings is more thorny, but we can discover that some species have a stronger vital essence than others. The question of vital essence and it's nature become primordial and a scientific and philosophical (theological ?) investigation is required.

The interesting thing with BioArt is that it raise ethics issues and is simultaneously in it's existence an ethics issue. Actually, if we assume that modifying deeply living beings is prohibited, we can wonder wheter modying living beings for BioArt purpose is permited or not. We can also wonder what living beings can be used for BioArt works. If we consider that genetic modifications are enabled only in case of necessity, it bring on the millenary question of the necessity of Art. We can also consider that a genetic modification do not need to be necessary but only to be useful, and it raises the question of usefulness of Art. If it's complex to talk about the necessity of art, it's social usefulness makes no doubts, and the fact that art have been kept by natural selection, despite the time it takes to mankind, is a proof of it's usefulness at the species scale. This Art raises more questions by it's own existence than by it's works, and it's a proof of it's necessity in a society of people disconected with the science that make their everiday life and their future. The use of genetically engineered organisms and biotechnologies in BioArt – from bacteria to humans – is thus no more superfluous, because it's a very good way to protect ourselves against a greater abuse.

Bibliography

  • Aristote, On the soul
  • Epicure, Letter to Hérodote
  • Bichat, Physiological researches upon life and death
  • Darwin, On the origin of species
  • Descartes, Discourse on the method
  • Lamarck, Philosophie zoologique
  • Nietzsche, La volonté de puissance
  • Foucault, Birth of the clinic
  • Synthetic organisms and living machines ; Anna Deplazes and Markus Huppenbauer
  • Methanogenic burst in the end-Permian carbon cycle ; Daniel H. Rothmana, Gregory P. Fournier, Katherine L. French, Eric J. Alm, Edward A. Boyle, Changqun Cao and Roger E. Summons.