Premeditated Man
THE VIKING
PRESS
Publishers
of The Viking Portable Library and Viking
Compass paperbacks
625
Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022
Untested brain operations to alter your
personality? Drugs to pacify people who doctors claim might otherwise become
dangerous? Genetic engineering to weed out potential cancer patients,
psychopaths, or "undesirables"? Wombs for hire! Mysterious and
unwarranted experiments on human subjects?
...
and many of these biomedical techniques are already in use. In Premeditated
Man Dr. Richard Restak, a neurologist who has written extensively on
all these subjects, gives us an informal and lively presentation of the facts
about medicine and bioethics. He argues persuasively that it is time we had
something to say in the decisions about such crucial technologies. "Our
health; how long we will live; the quality of our lives --all these are
dependent on biomedical technology. And there can be no turning back from that
dependence." We must, Dr. Restak argues, be informed about the current
capabilities for changing humanity as we know it; if we are ignorant, the
changes will, be made without our knowledge-and against our interests.
Dr. Restak's dispassionate, yet in
some sense shocking, book begins with a discussion of the issues raised in
psychosurgery, the most dramatic form of behavior modification now in use. In
the second part of Premeditated Man, he explores the implications of
"genetic engineering" of all kinds: do we want to preselect our
children and our children's children? Lastly, Dr. Restak analyzes the
experiences, and the dreadful lessons, of past and present human
experimentation.
"I've tried to integrate my
experiences as physician and concerned citizen," Dr. Restak writes, for it
is his belief that it is up to us, Americans, ordinary people, not doctors
or government bureaucrats, to decide the fateful issues of biotechnology.