Becoming overly involved in the technical details of the technology greatly obscures the truly profound implications of CRISPR.
CRISPR is a naturally occurring process that has already been invented and perfected for us through natural selection.
Mother Nature is the true inventor and rightful patent holder of this technology.
Humans likely would not have been able to create a similar technology from the ground up for decades.
The question to ask yourself is: What would happen if genetics could be changed?
Taking a wide focus on the overall landscape of this technology and abstracting away the current implementations allows one to have
a clearer perspective. This is how the scientific community interpreted this technology 3 years ago. Substantial resources were committed
on the basis of the first round of discovery. We are now already experiencing a substantial first wave of applications.
In this vein of thought it is interesting to speculate what might happen if a CRISPR-CAS gene were inserted into the human genome.
Of course there could be truly terrifying consequences if something were to go awry. For example, in such a setting any passing virus or bacteria
might become incorporated into one's DNA. However, one could then also imagine an extraordinary new lifestyle in which one could constantly
have control over one's gene expression. Real time control over what proteins are expressed and how. This would simply turbo-charge the basic
CRISPR setup.
Genetics is a compromise. Alleles that might confer an advantage for intelligence at one stage of development often confer a deficit at another.
With real time genetic control, such compromises would not need to be made.
It is important to remember that there are already similar technologies.
CRISPR is just so much easier and so much cheaper.
It is a basic technology that requires minimal training and can be done over a few days.
A DIY kit is being promoted on the internet.
One of the only ingredients needed is $30 worth of RNA guide.
It is not entirely clear how a research moratorium could be imposed on such a technology.
Many other technologies that were not so simple and cheap have been managed before, though this one seems completely
unregulatable.
CRISPR is already profoundly reshaping the research landscape.
Imagine having primates as lab models instead of mice.
Having the right model means everything.
It is not difficult to expect that a wave of medical innovation is already in the pipe.
Almost every human illness has been cured hundreds of times over in mice models.
However, these mouse models have time and time again been shown not to translate well into humans.
With CRISPRed primate models available medical treatment should emerge nearly immediately.
Edited by mag1, 28 November 2015 - 02:39 PM.