The Tucker Carlson Show - Tucker Debates Biotech CEO on Baby Customization, Eugenics, and God’s Existence

Episode Date: April 13, 2026

Kian Sadeghi, CEO of Nucleus Genomics, wants to help parents design their own babies, from height to IQ to personality traits. What happens to humanity when we have the power to tamper with life’s f...ormula? Kian Sadeghi is the founder and CEO of Nucleus Genomics, a genetic testing company that screens embryos for disease and allows parents to choose the traits of their unborn child. He founded Nucleus in 2021. Kian has been named a Thiel Fellow, and Nucleus has raised more than $32 million from investors including Founders Fund, Seven Seven Six, and Samsung Next. Paid partnerships with: Cozy Earth: Luxury shouldn't be out of reach. Get up to 20% off at https://cozyearth.com/TUCKER  Defend: Enter code "Tucker" for 20% off your purchase at https://defendcellcam.comTCN: NEW! Tucker Carlson Books presents Russell Brand’s ‘How to Become a Christian in 7 Days.’ Available only on  https://tuckercarlsonbooks.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:01 Thanks for doing this. I appreciate it. I'll just say at the outset, which I told you off camera, I disagree with this conceptually, I think, but I'm also completely ignorant of the details. Yeah. So I kind of want to know what this is before even asking you questions about whether it's a good idea. Can you, can you just, I'll just stand back and let you explain what you're doing? Yeah. So first, thanks for having me on. Of course. So patients, there's one way of reproducing via IVF, right? you can conceive naturally via sex or maybe if you're infertile or if you have some sort of heartytered disease or for some other reason you do IVF when you do yeah I'm sorry I'm gonna I specialize in dumb questions can you just explain for people to know what is IVF please yeah what is IVF stands for in vitro fertilization so basically imagine the egg and the sperm right the foundation of life to make an embryo it's basically putting those things together in a in a clinic right and then basically you take that embryo and you transfer it into a woman and then an implant and the woman's pregnant
Starting point is 00:01:02 So conception takes place outside the womb. Correct. Okay. Yeah. And so during this process of IVF, what do you do is today, even if nucleus didn't exist, even if genetic optimization didn't exist, you make several embryos. Okay. So in an IVF clinic, you make several embryos.
Starting point is 00:01:18 The amount of embryos end up making, it varies, but you might have four or five. You actually do genetic testing on these embryos to identify things like chromosome abnormalities, like Down syndrome, for example. So that's very commonplace. So that's done in basically every IVF clinic in the United States. they will actually screen embryos, the genetics of the embryos, to see if they have some sort of severe chromosomal abnormality. What we do is we basically provide more information on embryos. So we also read the DNA, but now we give information on things like other heritory disease risk,
Starting point is 00:01:46 also chronic diseases, things like cancers, Alzheimer's, diabetes, also traits like IQ or height, etc. So to be clear, we're not changing any DNA. There's this process in IVF where you make embryos. already genetic testing is done in embryos. What we do now is you provide you a little bit more information on your embryos. So basically, that information can be used, then implant which embryo the couple deems to be best. So basically give more information to couples to then choose which embryo they want to implant. I don't want to derail this conversation two minutes in. Okay.
Starting point is 00:02:19 But you've just said we can tell the IQ of a person by the genetics? So IQ. I was reliably informed IQ is not real. Okay. And it's not determined by the genetics. genetics. So, so there's, so I think it's helpful to think about all these different characteristics from diseases to traits, right? People know intuitively something like height, for example, right? Hyde, they say, oh, that's genetic or something like breast cancer, eye color, right?
Starting point is 00:02:44 These things people intuitively know are genetic. And so you can actually basically take these different phenotypes and measure how genetic any phenotype is. So what does it actually mean? The most simple way of explaining is imagine you took two identical twins. So they have the same DNA, right? and then basically you separated the twins, they grew up in different environments. Sometimes in pop culture, people hear about these different things, but you actually take twins, and they have, again, the same DNA, they're identical DNA, and then you grow up in different places for whatever reason, so they're subject to different environments. And you can actually measure basically how much more similar they, how similar they are across all these different phenotypes
Starting point is 00:03:17 to see basically how genetic something is. Twin studies. Yes, twin studies, yes. And so using twin studies, you can actually get measurements of things from diseases, right, like cancers and diabetes and Alzheimer's as mentioned, to things like high-evales. or IQ or BMI, et cetera. So twin studies show that IQ specifically is about 50% genetic. But to be clear, IQ is just one of over 2,000 factors that we actually look at, right?
Starting point is 00:03:40 Principally, parents and patients, they come for disease. They always come for disease. And remember that when the embryos you're picking from, the most important determinant of the genetics of your embryos is, well, your partner, right? So you're actually not changing DNA. This is not gene editing. You're not changing DNA. You're not making like an embryos DNA better. you're basically reading the embryo's DNA that you have.
Starting point is 00:04:01 So when you pick your partner, you're basically picking the kind of genetic bull, and then you can basically pick which embryo you deem to be best based off of your preferences and values. I mean, this like, again, I just want to say thank you for doing this. I'm not here to attack you at all. I think this is one of the most important conversations we can have. I agree. You're much younger than I am. So you weren't here for the debates that took place in the early 1990s about what traits
Starting point is 00:04:29 are the product of genetics and which are the product of environment. But up until pretty recently, the public conversation has settled on a consensus that everything is environment and that genetics aren't real. And this was at the very center of our national debate about race and crime and educational achievement, income. And it all grew out of or was crystallized by a book called The Bell Curve. Have you heard of this? Yeah, I have you.
Starting point is 00:04:58 Yeah. So it seems like that debate is over. And I'm not, there's not an attack at all. It's just like crazy to me that people are just saying this out loud. Yeah, genetics plays a big role. Yeah, genetics plays a role. So I think in society today, when people think about like height or cancers, and to be clear, I'm not talking about there's heartitary disease risks like PQ, TASX, cystic fibrosis,
Starting point is 00:05:22 beta thalcemia, these are conditions we also screen for, right, to make sure that parents can, you know, reduce suffering each generation. that's also part of what we do. And those conditions are basically deterministic in nature. Right? So if you have two bad copies of like cystic fibrosis, you're going to get cystic fibrosis, and it's debilitating. And so there's like policies, you know, that basically encourage, you know, Americans and people around the world to do screening to not pass down basically an invisible genetic
Starting point is 00:05:45 burden to their child. Right. Right. That's like classical kind of genetic. So I think it's interesting because you make it. It's eugenics, right? No, no, no, not eugenics. Eugenics.
Starting point is 00:05:54 How is it not? It's improving the human species. No, no. You know, eugenics refers to basically a corrosive use, corrosively controlling human reproduction, right? For sterilizations, even euthanasia, controlling who can get married to who. So no, no, no, no. Those are methods by which you implement in eugenics, but they're not the only ones. Eugenics simply means there's something inherently, well, you can disagree with the concept,
Starting point is 00:06:18 but the concept is grosser or not, the improvement of a species, in this case, the human species, through selective breeding. Well, but there's no selective breeding. Remember, patients choose who they marry. And then in the embryos they have, right, you're not changing any embryos. In the embryos they have, patients can make their own choice in which embryo they want to implant. So juxtapose like eugenics. How is that not selective breeding? This is literally, well, breeding is, well, breeding is, by definition, the process of bringing new life into the world. And you're deciding which of these embryos becomes a person. And so that is, that is breeding. It's not, it's not choosing people's marriage. it's not giving them forced vasectomies, but it is breeding, that's what breeding is. Well, I would say that in IVF clinics for, you know, last couple decades, there's been this process of basically taking these embryos, getting more information on the embryos,
Starting point is 00:07:10 and then picking which embryo you want to implant, right? Right. Again, you're not changing DNA. You're not controlling who can get married to who. Like, just to be clear, if you go back, eugenics is a term, it came up within the late 19th century by a scientist named Francis Galton. Okay. He was a British scientist. Yeah, a bunch of Havlock Ellis.
Starting point is 00:07:28 Yeah. Yeah, he came up with the term eugenics. Interestingly, the term eugenics was actually about 20 years before the term genetics. This is really interesting. A lot of people don't know that. Yeah, this is very important. Eugenics naturally did not require genetics. Genetics, when the term was coined, it was the science of Hedity, right, of passing down information.
Starting point is 00:07:47 Remember, the units of heredity identified as DNA. That was only until the 1940s. Right? Right. And then identifying the structure of DNA was actually actually, after World War II in the 1950s. So we didn't even know for basically, in 1927, and I think it was Buck versus Bell,
Starting point is 00:08:03 the US Supreme Court deemed forced sterilizations constitutional. At that point, we had no idea that DNA was actually the genetic basis. This is really, really important. People always get this wrong because they don't follow the timeline. Eugenics as a, as a, as a corrosive ideology to control populations,
Starting point is 00:08:20 had nothing to do with molecular genetics, period. It had nothing to do with the genetics. Why was it corrosive? Well, I think if you basically force sterilize somebody against their will, I mean, I think that's against the fundamental liberty of a person. There's no question that I couldn't agree more.
Starting point is 00:08:35 But again, that was just one manifestation of it. So force played no role in a lot of it. It was steering people, giving them options, telling them that if you married this kind of person, here's the outcome you're likely to get when you have children. Well, force did play
Starting point is 00:08:50 I mean, again, in 1927, the United States, the Supreme Court deemed constitutionally and forced sterilizations are constitution i'm just saying that and i couldn't be more opposed to that yeah in fact to the whole program but i just want to note as a factual matter that forced sterilizations were an incredibly ugly evil manifestation of an idea that was not limited to forced sterilizations yeah is the same idea you're articulating which is people should try to improve the human species by selective creation of children so yeah i disagree with that i just How is it different?
Starting point is 00:09:25 So nucleus ultimately, and what we give patients, ultimately what patients actually want, right? Again, patients are choosing their partner. They're choosing to do IVF. They have basically options. They have civil embryos. They get information. There's actually no best embryo, right? So nucleus is a company and no patient can ever say, oh, this is the best embryo because there's no fundamental virtue rooted in biological characteristics.
Starting point is 00:09:50 So, like, the idea that, like, you could even have a best, for example, is misguided, principally, in my view. Because something like virtue, right, and I think of two kinds of virtue. There's natural virtue and then divine virtue, right? It's fundamentally not biological. It's not physical. Genetics can only program for physical things,
Starting point is 00:10:06 and then people can basically make their choices within their partners that they choose and in doing IVF to them to them that sets the best set of biological characteristics to them, but there is no virtue. There's no morality in that decision. Oh, I've noticed. Yeah. But so do you think that it's equally virtuous to have a child,
Starting point is 00:10:22 intentionally have a child, which we can now do, with the genetic testing you're describing, who has Down syndrome, TASX, and CF, is that as virtuous as having a child who has none of those things? Because I thought you just said
Starting point is 00:10:36 that it's good to get rid of those things. To be clear, virtues independent of biological characteristics, parents can choose, based off their preference what they want, what is best. So let me give an example. Let me give an example. So there was a case of reproductive medicine where a deaf couple,
Starting point is 00:10:51 they want to have a deaf child. Yep. That to them was what we're, was best, basically. That term best is relative, context-specific to the parent. We have patients, for example, that might have, you know, Huntington's, which is a severe neurogenital disease. Very severe.
Starting point is 00:11:08 It's auto-sumannot dominant means it's passed down. And by the way, this is actually interesting. Something like Huntington's or schizophrenia, these are exactly the kind of conditions that in the 20th century, they would say, hey, these people are unfit, right? They should not be produced, right? Because they have some sort of neuropsychiatric or some sort of debilitating, um, condition that runs in the family. Like in my case,
Starting point is 00:11:27 one of the reason why I started the business is because one of my family members, she unfortunately went to sleep and she passed away in her sleep. So these things are deeply personal to people. Is that the result of a genetic anomaly? Yeah, a condition that can cause irregular heart beating can cause sudden death. Everyone loves relaxing at home. Cozy Earth can maximize that experience. If you haven't tried their robes or their slippers,
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Starting point is 00:12:32 Mention you heard about Cozy Earth from us on this show. I don't want to sidetrack you, but you threw in schizophrenia, rather? Yeah. Is there, I don't know the answer. Is there evidence that that is genetically predisposed to it? Schizophrenia is very strongly, there's a very strong genetic basis to schizophrenia, right? Really? Correct.
Starting point is 00:12:49 Yeah, yeah. And we know that. Yes, that is very well-established science. Yeah. Sorry. I'm learning. Yeah, no, it's interesting. So, okay, but you said it a minute ago that there is a nationwide, indeed, a global effort to get rid of conditions like.
Starting point is 00:13:09 But again, deafness is a great example. It's not for me to tell a deaf couple where they should or shouldn't have a deaf child. No, no, I understand. But that can apply across everything now, right? If somebody wants to have a child based off their extent of what they deemed to be best, based off their lived experience, but that's their writing, that's their choice. So I'm not saying that it's better to have a child that is not deaf, for example. I can't do that.
Starting point is 00:13:30 I can't possibly say that it depends. I think that's entirely the choice of the family. That's entirely choice of the couple. That's a consistent position. I wonder though, because you describe something that's absolutely real, which is a system globally that is designed to minimize, to reduce the incidence of certain conditions. Right? So you said that.
Starting point is 00:13:51 That's the policy. like you genetic test all the embryos at every IVF clinic because you want to make sure we have less Down syndrome, for example. But no, but again, what's important here is there's not some sort of broad centralized body being like, oh, we need to all do this sort of testing embryos. That decision rests in the parent's choice. A parent can choose not to screen embryos for Down syndrome. They could make that decision. And if they make that decision, they can then transfer that embryo and have that baby. That's entirely their choice.
Starting point is 00:14:20 So you think there's no, and I don't, I mean, let's not be disingenuous. There is a global effort to reduce the incidence of certain conditions. Of course, everyone just assumes, like, you can't, I mean, that's why the incidence of Down syndrome has fallen off a cliff. There's been an elimination of Down syndrome, not entirely, but pretty much. Those are parents making choices, though. Those are parents and couples making the choices. You don't think that health care systems steer people in certain directions or have a preference? I think the health care system, unfortunately, right now is a sick care system.
Starting point is 00:14:49 I mean, the healthcare system actually is very much not in the business of prevention. I mean, it's interesting. I was looking at these stats, which is the U.S. healthcare system spends about $5 trillion, which a lot. About, I think, $4 trillion goes to chronic disease treatment. So things like cancers and diabetes and Alzheimer's. In 2021, four times many people died of a chronic disease than COVID. Four times many people died of a chronic disease than COVID at the peak of the pandemic. So you have to ask what is the real, what is the real pandemic?
Starting point is 00:15:19 pandemic here. Okay. And on that point, you know, if you think about it, and also, by the way, of the $5 trillion, so $4 trillion, about 80% is chronic disease. About 500 billion is about rare diseases. So these rare genetic conditions that I outlined, right? So genetics has a strong impact in both heartitary disease, like cancer, as I outlined, like chronic diseases, as well as rare disease. So genetics can help impact, you know, four, four and a half trillion dollars of health care expenditure, but, and there is a but. Remember, those $4.5 trillion, somebody's making money for someone being sick. Well, yeah.
Starting point is 00:15:48 And that's horrible. That's horrible. But it's of course, you say, of course, but I think that. We can't just take that as a given, right? Like, genetics as a science, if deplored, can be used for parents to make their own decisions to dramatically reduce breast cancer risk, diabetes risk, if there's something in their family, schizophrenia, Alzheimer's, help reduce that next generation. So these things can be used to basically help build what we call generational health effectively.
Starting point is 00:16:08 So I don't- You save a lot of money through improving the species through eugenics. Everyone, people made this argument for over 100 years. I get it. I'm just wondering, well, I'm wondering a lot of things. But, well, one thing to say, remember, too, that IVF is about 2% of the way babies are born in the United States. Most babies are still born naturally conceived. So we actually have a service for those couples as well.
Starting point is 00:16:32 Well, you can just basically take a cheek swab. You can do something called procreation simulation and simulate basically the risk for your child. Okay. And that is a service that can basically help any couple, too. So I just want to be clear that it's not just IVF patients as well. These are couples that then can employ these screening and then to have a healthy baby. What about sex? What about sex?
Starting point is 00:16:54 Well, I mean, the number one thing that people have used prenatal testing for is choosing the sex of their child. So that's what explains the demographic imbalance in China, as you know. So that's like the number one thing globally. India, same. And India actually outlawed it, to be clear, too. So in IVF clinic, you can't even pick sex in India because there's a disbalance. But, well, legally, but of course it happens all the time because there's a global preference for sons. And that's why you see so many more boys than girls when in fact it's the opposite.
Starting point is 00:17:25 In the United States, actually, if you look at the IVF, it's about 50-50. I'm saying, I'm not talking about the U.S., but how do you feel about that? Would it be okay with you if someone came in and said, get rid of the girl embryos? So to be clear, that's, so to be clear, in the United States, this has played out over the last like 20 years. people have been able to pick the sex of their child in IVF clinics, both the United States. And then, again, at some point internationally too, but eventually became outlawed for the reason you outlined, which is people generally pick slightly more boys. I mean, it's illegal and it's much harder in these countries. Okay.
Starting point is 00:17:57 In the United States, though, if you actually played out people making their own choices, it ends up being about, again, 50-50. So this is actually interesting because people- What do you think of it? Was it valid for someone to come in and say, I mean, you said this is a, you know, an ethical, neutral question, you know, about whether or not to have a child with this or that genetic condition. But what about sex? Is that ethically neutral? Is it okay, in your view, for a couple to say, I don't want any girls? In my view, that is the prerogative of the parents to pick which sex they want. And if you play that out across many, many, many couples making their own independent
Starting point is 00:18:31 choices, right, which is an embodiment of this kind of liberty and choice, you see it ends up being about 50-50, which I think actually undercuts this idea that everyone's going to pick, you know, a boy, for example. Right, there's this notion. culturally specific in its time, you know, exactly. Of course. But that applies across any traits then, Tucker, which is people, there's not a universal best. It's very much key specific to the specific family history, specific values and culture. Of course, of course. But I think we're talking about two different things. You're talking about outcomes, and I'm talking about the process and whether the process itself is valid. And right. And I totally, I've actually seen the number. So I know that you were absolutely right on the question of sex selection. But you think, you think, you it's okay, there's no moral problem at all, because these are questions of life and death. So I do think moral questions are relevant questions. You don't think there's any moral question
Starting point is 00:19:23 around choosing by sex. To be clear, I think that there is no universal biological best period across any phenotype, because biology is inherently neutral. Now there is universal morality. Okay, specifically, again, two kinds. There's natural virtue, right?
Starting point is 00:19:42 and also divine virtue. Natural virtue can come from the cultivation of the soul, which is independent of biology. It's not in the physical plane. How is that different from divine virtue? Divine virtue to me is more about union with God. So natural virtues is there's no God, where does the soul come from?
Starting point is 00:19:59 There's God. There's God, what do you mean? Why is there no God? Of course I agree, but I don't know why there's a distinction between the virtues again. We're in the weeds. Natural virtue, I'll tell you why. Natural virtue can be intellectually derived,
Starting point is 00:20:10 wisdom, courage, justice, temperance. It's kind of classic Aristotle. And then there's things like grace and revelation, which come from God. You can't necessarily, a human being's mind is limited, it's finite. You can't necessarily grasp that. So there has to, there's a, so you can, one, you can derive from thinking, like,
Starting point is 00:20:28 what leads to basic eunimonia, human flourishing, that kind of virtue, natural virtue, right? Coming from Aristotle. And the other kind is thinking about divine virtue, which is what goes beyond the intellect, which Thomas Aquinas basically brought together. thought about, okay, there's this idea of natural virtue that, you know, the Greeks came up with. And then, of course, there's this idea of divine virtue coming from, you know, the Old and New Testament about union with God.
Starting point is 00:20:50 And, you know, old religions actually talk ultimately about surrendering. Personally, I do believe in God, just so, you know, if that's not clear. Well, here's something that thieves count on security cameras usually stop where Wi-Fi stops, right? Makes sense. So if you've got a barn, a job site, equipment parked outside along driveway, Criminals know there's a good chance that nobody is watching this because there's no Wi-Fi. And that's why we like Defend by Tacticam. It's a new sponsor of this show.
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Starting point is 00:22:08 Let's defend cell cam. It's never too early to plan your summer story in Europe with WestJet, from rolling countryside to cobblestone streets. Begin your next chapter. Book your seat at westjet.com or call your travel agent, WestJet, where your story takes off. Dot com. What kind of God do you believe in? So I've meditated for about seven years.
Starting point is 00:22:33 And what I keep coming across is the best way to our story. articulate, I see God as an experience versus an ideology, which is that there's a quote. It's actually from Rumi. I think he articulates, well, Rumi is a Persian poet. He says, imagine you go to the ocean and you come back with a pitcher of water. So the picture of my mind is the ego, is the logical mind. And then the ocean is God, the source, the one, the divine, whatever you want to call it. Okay. That's how I think about God. So I think from my experience, meditating, And from what I've seen, the, again, human mind, the intellectual mind is limited and finite, and there's basically this vastness.
Starting point is 00:23:12 It's hard to describe, which is why often the Sufis would use poetry to actually describe God, because it's this hard. You can allude to it. You can't describe it directly because it's too big. Precisely. It's infinite. It's vast. That's why, like, the ocean as an example.
Starting point is 00:23:25 Another way I like to think about it is like if you're a raindrop, and it's easy for us, especially in modern society, to think the raindrop is the world, but eventually you return to the ocean, and you realize it's much bigger. And so, um, so that's your conception of God. Yes, that's my, again, I think God is more, is more an experience. It can't get, God cannot be conceptualized. It cannot be articulated. It's not a logical thing.
Starting point is 00:23:47 You cannot use logic to articulate God. I mean, to me, that's a, it's incompatible. But so I think you can try to use metaphors, you can try to explain it. I always like the Sufi poets because I feel like they do a really, really nice, beautiful job of that. Certainly of describing the vastness and fundamental incomprehensibility of God for precisely. Oh, I couldn't agree with you more. And only poetry can capture that, but it leaves unanswered the core question for the three Abrahamic religions, which is what does God want for us to do and believe? And what's your view on that?
Starting point is 00:24:19 Well, Islam specifically, Islam literally means surrendering to one. Yes. I think that's the answer. In other words, Islam, and you can, I'm not Christian, you're Christian, so you can tell me more about Christians view, but there's a concept of surrender in Christianity. So in Islam, it means literally Islam. Not just a concept. Yeah, it's an experience. It's the whole thing. The whole thing.
Starting point is 00:24:39 The whole thing. Literally. Surrender to being tortured to death. Exactly. Yeah. Oh, of course. Right? And then in Buddhism as well.
Starting point is 00:24:43 They call it different things in Buddhism. It's a little bit more like surrendering to the illusion of the ego, for example. But the concept of surrendering, I think, is basically universal. There's no question. And so, yeah. But, right. So that's my answer. That's my answer.
Starting point is 00:25:00 That's the, you know, that's the very beginning. That's the conceptual understanding of it. But then you move immediately into what does God, want you to do. What powers does he have? What powers do you have? What are the things you're allowed to do? What are the things you're not allowed to do? I mean, that's just a product of logic, but it's also like pretty spelled out in every one of the three religions that derive from Abraham. So what's your view of that? Like, are there things that God won't allow us to do? The way I think about this is there's sort of three different moral philosophies somebody could adopt.
Starting point is 00:25:32 There's one's idea of consequentialism, which is basically the end justifies, the means, which you see a lot of in today's culture. I have noticed that. Yeah, unfortunately, even in Silicon Valley, which we can talk about. Even in Silicon Valley? Yeah, especially. Did you just say that? Especially.
Starting point is 00:25:46 Especially. Especially in Silicon Valley. Then there's a... Sam Altman may even be doing it. I mean, yeah, we can talk about that. And the thing is, when people realize or not, they're more philosophies, they end up succumbing to one anyways, whether you recognize it. Of course.
Starting point is 00:26:02 There's consequentialism. Everybody's religious. Yes, and then, yeah, exactly. And then there's this concept of deontology, which is sort of like maybe, you know, the end does not justify the means. And there's rules, right? Murder is bad. Line is bad. And, you know, it's kind of, no matter what the specific circumstance are, these things are wrong, right?
Starting point is 00:26:16 There's that moral philosophy. You can adopt deontology, which can be secular or non-cyclor, is my understanding of it. Then there's virtue ethics. Not really. Okay. If there are rules, why are they rules rather than preferences? If you came up with them, their preferences. If the power that created the universe came up with them, then their rules.
Starting point is 00:26:35 rules, then their laws. So one has no meaning at all. Yeah. Nothing can be better than anything else. And the other is absolute. So like, no, there can't be a secular, sorry Aristotle, a secular understanding of absolute value. I think there cannot be a secular understanding of divine virtue. We can get more into this, what I mean there.
Starting point is 00:26:58 But let me just outline this quickly and then I think I'll bring it around. So there's consequentialism, which is most people I think contemporary society adopt. There's deontology, right, which is as you rooted in some sort of. maybe there's some universal, this is good, this is bad, then there's virtue ethics, right? Which basically the, instead of saying, oh, the consequence, instead of saying, oh, this action is good because the consequence was good or this action is good because the action is inherently good or wrong
Starting point is 00:27:21 because of some secular or non-secular set of rules, you're saying, hey, the actual thing that you need to measure and you need to think about is the moral character of the person doing the action. And then if the moral character, if they possess these kind of cardinal virtues, things like temperance and justice and wisdom, for example, then it so follows that the action they do would be virtuous. So you try to cultivate the soul, basically. And then in cultivating the soul and cultivating virtue,
Starting point is 00:27:46 confers basically virtue and the action. So basically the first two, in my view, in my view, deontology and consequentialism is very much about the action. It's saying, hey, is this outcome good based off some thing you try to maximize? And then deontology, which is this concept of, forget about the outcome is good or not, is this the right or wrong thing? then the concept of virtue ethics, which is, instead of saying, you know, looking at the action, right, because ultimately human beings produce action, actions, you know, aren't just there, human beings produce action. The quality of the action should be measured or it's deemed virtuous if the person can strive and embody virtue, okay? And so personally, and I'm still, by the way, talking about natural virtue right now. I'm talking about divine version. I'm talking about in the intellectual plane, things that people can think about and reason or argue over things of the mind, not things that go beyond the mind, right? And so in the constant of virtue ethics, I think this
Starting point is 00:28:34 This is the trial of moral philosophy we try to embody in saying, hey, and this comes back all the way to embryonic selection, which is, hey, there is no biological best. There is no, right? Again, the soul, the soul, which is non-physical, ultimately does not rest. It cannot be programmed in biology. So people can have different preferences. Somebody could say, you know, I want my son or daughter to be a lawyer, someone else could say, you know, athletes, someone else could say an entrepreneur, someone else could say an artist. these are different outcomes that are based off people's local preferences, physical preferences, contextual preferences, but they're smaller, right?
Starting point is 00:29:09 They're smaller preferences. They're not a divine preference. There's not just a thing as that. Yeah, well, of course I disagree that there's no divine preference, but I... There's no divine preference in biology because the divine isn't rooted in the, it's not, it's not, what depends where you think biology came from, I guess. I guess that's true. I mean, I also don't...
Starting point is 00:29:28 Can people create life? no no so this is actually a paradox that I struggle with too because another thing that I think a lot about is something called panpsychism which is this idea that basically each object has its consciousness even like a rock right and this might sound strange to people but doesn't sound strange it doesn't sound strange okay I don't think you're fully off base I don't know the answer I don't know yeah I don't know either crazy thing to wonder this idea that you know rock has a consciousness it's a it's a it's a being I'll be it not as sophisticated human consciousness, but it's there. And it provides this idea that
Starting point is 00:30:02 consciousness is this kind of spectrum all the way up to, let's say, humans. And then each thing has this consciousness, and accordingly, it's kind of made and it's endowed with something that goes beyond just kind of its weight or matter, basically. It's basically very non-imperialist,
Starting point is 00:30:20 non-materialist, and it basically believes this idea that, again, God has given this consciousness to everything. And I tend to, I actually like that. a lot. I actually like that a lot for a lot of reasons. Okay, so can I just ask you a couple fundamental questions? Sure, please. So you just said, I think you said that people cannot create life.
Starting point is 00:30:39 I think nature has a greater intelligence, and human beings, sometimes people would say we are part of nature, but we are nature. But like, so you're in the life business, right? I mean, obviously, you're... We would, what IVF does, for example, is they use natural laws. We didn't make these natural laws.
Starting point is 00:30:58 Right. We use natural laws that exist. And then we, and then basically, and to be clear, we're not an IVF clinic. We work in IVF clinics and IVF clinics are the ones that doing IVF. We provide more information. But in the context of IVF, you are using natural law. You are not making natural law. You're not, you know, and I think there's a good chance you may be violating natural law. But I, you know, I don't know. I'm not in charge. But I just, I want to get to the fundamental question, though, which is who creates life? I think I would say God, but to be clear, so this is complicated, but you're not the only one who doesn't, who is uncertain. I mean, obviously I don't know. And I don't mean to put you on the spot. Who creates life? Come on. I shouldn't be even asking questions like this and expecting you to have some cogent answer because I don't think anyone does. No.
Starting point is 00:31:53 Other than to say God or to say more precisely, not us. Not us. Is that fair to say not us? Yeah, that is fair to say not us. And we operate within that plane. And to be clear, the stories of sci-fi, right, like Frankenstein, for example, or even Jurassic apart to some example, but Frankenstein, this idea that we can make life, right? We cannot make life.
Starting point is 00:32:09 That's the lesson of these stories. Let me just say, I think you've thought a lot more about this in your average businessman. So I'm, I was going to, I didn't know how I was going to handle this, but you're a lot more thoughtful than I expected for a young entrepreneur. So thank you. Thank you, Tucker. No, I mean that. Totally sincerely.
Starting point is 00:32:26 you've actually thought a lot about this. And I don't know the answers to any of these questions, really, but giving my best shot. But we both agree that some higher being created life. We know that we didn't. So we could assign it to nature, we could assign it to God, but we don't create life. We don't create life.
Starting point is 00:32:44 We do. We operate within nature. Right. Open within nature. Amen. For decades, Russell Brand was one of the most famous actors and comedians and agnostics in the world. Today, he is one of the most sincere Christians we know, a follower of Christ. His personal transformation is remarkable.
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Starting point is 00:33:34 And we're starting this venture with what matters most. And that's Russell Brand's message of the promise of forgiveness and joy through Jesus. We're proud to launch our new bookstore with Russell Brands, how to become a Christian in seven days. It is the message this country needs most. Find us today on Tucker Carlson Books. AI is moving fast across the enterprise. But without visibility, it's just chaos. Different tools, different models, different teams using AI in completely different ways.
Starting point is 00:34:03 ServiceNow turns that chaos into control. With the AI control tower, you see all your AI across the business in one place. What it's doing, what it's done, and what it's about to do. So you stay in control. To put AI to work for people, visit servicenow.com. we have the right to take life? So, so this is, so, so, so, no, we don't. Now, if we talk about embryo, because I assume this was your,
Starting point is 00:34:38 I'm not sure, I mean, it has all kinds of implications, including for the Iran war, but I'm just, it's all around us, the thoughtlessness with which we take life. It's not aimed at you. It's aimed at everybody, everybody on the globe, but it begins with the question, do we have the right to take life? So, again, let's think about the different moral values that someone could have here. If someone has consequentialism, they could say, hey, look, we want to, you know, commit murder for this good.
Starting point is 00:35:02 And maybe they have some good that they do to be good. I'm highly familiar with just for murder. I just want to know what you think. I'll tell you what I think. But I just tell you that there's kind of, it's like very pluralistic. And then somebody could say murder's always bad, which is fine. I respect that opinion, absolutely. And then there's sort of this last bucket, which, again, I'm going back to this idea
Starting point is 00:35:17 of virtue ethics, which is what do you, like, can you have a cultivation of the spirit of the soul to think, hey, you know, what is right in the situation? Because society does not have a definitive answer to this question, right? People will sometimes say, knee-jerk, they'll say, oh, murder's always bad, but then they'll be pro-the-death penalty, right? Or they're pro-war. People are inconsistent. There's no doubt about it, and they ignore their own failings and highlight those of others. They've got planks in their eyes, and they're picking the sawdust out of yours famously. So I get it. People are flawed. But I do think that we can, through a little bit of rigor, arrive at, like, what's right or wrong. Yes, I mean, yes, that's what we're trying to do.
Starting point is 00:35:53 What can we say about the right of a person to take another person's life? Well, I don't, I personally, I don't think there is a right. I personally don't think there's a right. Didn't any circumstance. I don't see that. I mean, and of course, there's a question like, what is, you know, I don't think there's a right, period. I just don't think so. Well, I'm with you.
Starting point is 00:36:13 I'm with you. I don't think it's right. I think we both understand it's hard not to want to exercise that right when you can or someone annoys you or someone annoys you. or there's a country you don't like, or there's a, okay. So then what can we say about an embryo in a lab? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Is that life?
Starting point is 00:36:30 So going back to the pan psychic philosophy, right, which is this idea. No, no, no, no. No, no, Tucker. I'll give you a proper answer, but these things are not, these are things are not simple. I can be like, oh, yes, it's like, let's just bear with me for a second. There is a spectrum of consciousness. There's a spectrum from, you know,
Starting point is 00:36:46 rock to a sentient being all the way to a more conscious, you know, being like a human, a more complicated, evolved. fully conscious being. And the question is, where does an embryo sit in that? That is the fundamental question. Does an embryo of a soul, for example? That is the key question. That is the key question, in my view. I totally agree. That is the key, like, let's just like make no mistake. Anytime somebody argues about an embryo and IVF, and to be clear, I just want to be very clear on the purposes of our business. We do not do IVF. We work within IVF clinics. I understand. Right. I just want to be very clear to everyone at the intersection of like every big trend. No, we have a huge
Starting point is 00:37:16 responsibility. Right. Yeah. And so I think it's important to, before we can even argue, oh, is an your life, it's like, well, where does the life come from? Right. Is it the physical thing? Right. For me, I think about, when I think about death, I think death is a doorway. That's my own personal belief. This is a, this is a, this is a vessel, right? You're not the physical. We're not the physical. We're something else. We're metaphysical. We're soul. Okay. And so then the fundamental question is that, okay, well, does an embryo have a soul? And then I think about it, I always like to think about things inductively. So I just don't want to think about an embryo, but I think about, you know, there's a huge diversity in a range of life.
Starting point is 00:37:50 and I can, in my head at least, and again, this is the feelings of the intellect. I think let's only do so much, okay. But when I think about, I think, okay, I think about a rock, which I think has some kind of maybe proto-consciousness, some like very, very limited consciousness that we don't understand, maybe through some psychic or meditative work, you could try to, you know, become a rock and try to understand it's like more subjective experience if it exists, right, all the way to an embryo, to a dog, to a human. And so because of this spectrum, it comes back to this question of at what point, basically,
Starting point is 00:38:19 do we have this, is there a soul in an embryo? And I tend to think, and I don't know, obviously, but I tend to think I tend to think that an embryo doesn't have a soul. Now, why do you think that? Well, I don't know. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:38:39 But why would you think? I would think that there's a couple reasons why, which is an embryo, so I can take a more reductionist approach, and I could say an embryo is principally a cell. and when you reproduce already, embryos actually... It's not just one cell. Yeah, it divides, exactly.
Starting point is 00:38:54 It divides and becomes many cells. But, principally at first it begins, just as one cell. I thought it was the sperm and the egg made the embryo. Yeah. Oh, so by definition. Yeah, it's a cell. Yeah. Sperm meets egg, it's a cell, and then it starts dividing.
Starting point is 00:39:07 And it becomes more and more eventually into a human. Sorry, I was saying, I just lost my turn and thought. So the question was, you said you tend to think that an embryo does. not have a soul, and I asked, why would you assume that? Yeah, yeah, yeah, I was articulating why. So when you look at the way that, when you look at the way that actually people conceive naturally, what ends up happening is that you have these formations of kind of small formations of an embryo, okay, right, which is this an egg meets the cell, and then it travels down and
Starting point is 00:39:45 tries to implant, and then many times actually naturally, it doesn't implant successfully. So nature already has it such that, you figure about IVF, and in natural conception, it is the case that basically you have these embryo formation and then ends up not forming. And now, the way I see it is, I see that nature wouldn't make it such that, or God wouldn't make it such that. An embryo would have a soul if in natural procreation, it is the case that the embryos come and go. Because I don't think God, in my personal belief, I don't think God would basically be getting rid of souls. I just don't think so. Now, do I think that there's a fundamental beauty, not just, I mean, absolutely to an embryo,
Starting point is 00:40:25 and this is really important for me to say, because I don't know how to say it. I do think it is similar to like a wave that forms and then again returns to the ocean because everything returns to the ocean. So I don't see it as something that's like, oh, the embryo is being discarded. I see it as returning back to the source,
Starting point is 00:40:40 even if I don't believe that it has an explicit soul. Does that make sense? So it's a little more of a nuanced argument. It does make a kind of sense. Right, yeah. It does make it kind of sense. I don't think it's insane and again I think you've thought about this
Starting point is 00:40:53 in a way that I'm very impressed by even if I don't agree and I just wish more people your business would like think about this because that's important. It's important. Yeah, right. It's very important. It may be the most important thing. It is.
Starting point is 00:41:07 So I guess the difference between a wave and IVF is the human choice involved in the latter. And so I guess the core problem that I have with this is that I'm not convinced that we have a right to make certain choices. Do people have the right to make any choice available to them? I think people don't have the right in our culture. People will conflate greater performance with being morally better, which is, I think, a big problem. So there's two kinds of value.
Starting point is 00:41:43 There's instrumental value and there's moral value. instrumental value is contingent and this is actually really important all of biology, all of nature is contingent value for example you know you
Starting point is 00:41:56 you would maybe want an entrepreneur potentially to be more risk seeking but you wouldn't want your surgeon to be more risk seeking in other words the value of phenotypes actually changes depending on the environments and this is obviously to say
Starting point is 00:42:08 but it's actually I think people miss this sometimes because they think there's a universal best they'll say hey if you optimize for X phenotype that I deem to be best, it will lead to a better person. It doesn't lead to a better person. It might lead to a more optimized outcome, but it doesn't lead to a better person. Dude, you're destroying your own case. No, I'm not, though.
Starting point is 00:42:23 Yes, you are. What you're saying is right. No, no, no, you're telling the truth about the way people are, which is lacking foresight and understanding of the holistic picture. So if people have the choice to choose their own children, we're going to have a nation of private equity people. No, I'm serious. They're going to optimize for what's good right now.
Starting point is 00:42:43 Yes, that does. Okay, so this is actually interesting. A couple of things. Oh, wow. No, I'm right. Oh, wow. No, no, Tucker. You just explained it better than I could.
Starting point is 00:42:50 Tucker, Tucker, this is so interesting because you're making an assumption. So there's many. About the way people are, yes, I am. There's many parts of this. The first part is, well, people basically all choose in the same direction. And, you know, interestingly, again, people actually want very different things. And we see that every day with patience, right? Which is like, there's this idea that, like, rich people will come in and be like, oh, every rich person is going to pick the same way.
Starting point is 00:43:08 As you mentioned, sex is actually a great proxy for this, right? Sex selection in the United States is about 50-50. And so if you think about any possible phenotype, even when somebody comes and says, I want to optimize for type two diabetes risk, someone else might want to do schizophrenia or Alzheimer's, depending on their family history. Somebody else might want to do height, for example,
Starting point is 00:43:25 if they're both shorter parents, they might want to have a taller kid. To be clear, the traits always come after diseases, but nevertheless. So what I'm saying is that there's this notion, there's this idea of a universal best biologic characteristic. It doesn't exist. It doesn't exist.
Starting point is 00:43:38 No, no, we're arguing two different things. I'm not saying I agree with you completely. And I believe that the diversity baked into humanity comes from God. He created different tribes. He did that on purpose. Yeah. That's my belief. And they're different from each other.
Starting point is 00:43:54 By definition, they're different tribes. And they have different characteristics. And a lot of those, as you have been brave enough to admit, are genetic. And that's a fruit of the creation. Yes. God did that. We didn't. People are very different.
Starting point is 00:44:07 They demand uniformity. And by the way, if you think we're going to get diverse outcomes, Have you been around rich people? They're not only very similar. They dress the same. They have exactly the same attitudes. They want their kids to get into the same six schools. I've lived in this world my whole life.
Starting point is 00:44:22 It's the opposite of what you're describing. They will all change. Rich people make up a very, very small set of society. There's a big world out there. What set of IVF patients do they make up? What percentage? Rich people, about all of them. I wouldn't say it's about all of them.
Starting point is 00:44:36 There are a lot of people that take... People who are dialed in to this technology. If people do IVF, if they can't generally, almost always because they can't conceive naturally to be clear. And natural conception is it all. It can cost quite a bit. I know. But Tucker, this is, but no.
Starting point is 00:44:51 I'm not attacking anyone. I know, Tucker, but this is important to say, which is people will conceive naturally first. Naturally, natural conception is free, to be clear. But that's what it costs me. Let's assume, let's actually play this out. Actually, it's really, really interesting. And I actually think you do touch on a fundamental point on the way that people tend to move together, especially wealthy people.
Starting point is 00:45:11 They tend to do the same thing. tend to, it's every group. I don't want to pick on rich people at all. I'm one of them, but I just am very familiar with them. Yeah. But social, societies are governed by herd instincts. That's why it's a society and not just a collection of hermits. So I think there's a couple ways that I think about this.
Starting point is 00:45:31 There's the kind of on the ground what I'm seeing, which I can tell you about what I'm seen, and then I can tell you about more of, we can talk about more broadly how this play out where the fact that people are pretty memetic and what they pick. Okay. On the ground, what I'm seeing is I see couples. Again, a diverse range of couples, to be clear, like, this technology is going to get cheaper and cheaper. Whole genome sequencing, specifically, this is actually interesting. The cost of reading all of somebody's DNA, it used to be about a billion dollars, one billion, right? So the human genome project in the early 2000s, it cost a billion dollars. When I started the business about six years ago in 2020, it was about $1,000, right? So a billion dollars to $1,000. That's the kind of wonder of making things cheaper
Starting point is 00:46:12 and making things more accessible. So I do think there's a point where this technology, anyone can actually access. That's really important to say. And that's one of my missions is to say, hey, this shouldn't only belong for people who have means, should belong to everybody. Right?
Starting point is 00:46:23 Because ultimately, every parent should have the right to reduce the suffering in their future child. I mean, I just think every parent has that right. I would never argue against the desire to reduce suffering, I guess. But then you have to ask yourself if the reduction of suffering is the most virtuous thing you could do, why are the societies on this planet with the least suffering falling apart the quickest?
Starting point is 00:46:49 Have you ever noticed that? Well, I think in more contemporary society, we've lost the concept of virtue generally, in my view. But is there a connection between suffering and virtue? And of course there is. It's a one-to-one, and there is no virtue without suffering, actually. and suffering is, so in other words, if you had a drug that could eliminate anxiety, just take a pill, no more anxiety, you could call it, I don't know, pick a name, benzodiazepines. And all of a sudden, you could just like eliminate this suffering.
Starting point is 00:47:21 And would there be downsides to that. Oh, there would be mass overdose deaths. There would be the zombification of the entire population. There would be addiction, physical addiction, that you could die because of, which, So I guess what I'm saying is I'm not making a case for anxiety, which is horrible. Anyone who's ever had it knows how horrible and terrifying it is. I'm only saying that maybe there's a purpose to suffering. We don't want to deal with it.
Starting point is 00:47:46 None of us does. I certainly don't. We can't transcend suffering in the same way we can't. Maybe we shouldn't. But we can't. It's like saying let's transcend gravity. We're in this world. We're in this natural plane.
Starting point is 00:47:56 We're trying to transcend suffering. And all I'm saying is societies, I'm not for suffering. I'm against suffering. I hate war. I don't like suffering at all and I think we should try to alleviate it but all I'm saying is maybe these aren't decisions that are up to us
Starting point is 00:48:12 and maybe there's a larger picture that we can't see and maybe we should pay close attention to our successful attempts to eliminate suffering and assess the fruits like what happened did it work or did it cause even more exquisite suffering more grotesque suffering I think that's a very fair in the context of, you know, there's a great example of obviously
Starting point is 00:48:36 opioids. People get addicted. They think they're getting rid of pain. What are opioids exactly? In getting rid of pain, you're actually creating more suffering. And that's a fair point. I think in the context of genetics and what we're doing is it's actually interesting because it's not invasive. Genetic, the optimization technology costs a couple thousand dollars, which is a lot, right? Which is a lot. It's going to keep coming down. It's going to come down. And so suddenly now, at the very beginning, you know, you have these embryos. Eventually, you're already doing IVF, you're already picking an embryo. You get more information.
Starting point is 00:49:05 You can pick an embryo with a 50% reduction risk in breast cancer. You can have an embryo without, you know, braca, which is a breast cancer marker, right? You can, you know, schizophrenia, debilitating condition really impacts families. Horrible. Horrible. And in fact, these are the very people who wouldn't want to have a child, who wouldn't want to. But now because of the advent of more advanced screening, they are more comfortable having a child. And that actually I think gets lost too.
Starting point is 00:49:32 I'm with you. Progenetic technology is fundamentally anti-ugenic. It's actually pro-genic technology, you're pro-natalist in that way, because the very people who would have been deemed unfit by some definition, right, because they have more suffering. And to be clear, if you suffer more, you have no less moral worth, to be very clear. We've said that already. We've established that.
Starting point is 00:49:49 You and I agree on that. But those are the very people that genetics is helping. That's the very people they're helping. The very people who would have been deemed unfit by the 20th century. through this technology, they're actually able to have a child through IVF, they're able to have a child and feel comfortable doing that. Also, there's been, you know. Wait, no, I can't, I'm not criticizing anything you're saying. It's just that I'm a stickler for definitions because it's important. Sure. This is eugenics, and it's, I mean, if you read the early eugenesis, some of whom are really smart. I have. It was an international movement, actually. It spanned many, many things to your point. Yeah. aware and it was thoroughly discredited by the Nazis who were the most enthusiastic eugenic of all. I mean, they cleared out the mental hospitals. Yeah. And they cleared out the disability though. In that way it's actually anti-ugenic because the very people that like the Nazis,
Starting point is 00:50:39 for example, would target, right, people who are sick and kill and kill and murder. That's kind of been forgotten to history. Horrible. But those very people are now that can actually access this technology. It's actually interesting. There was a, hold on, hold on. So the point, I don't want to bring the Nazis in because it's so emotionally fraught. they had all kinds of other sins. But the goal of the eugenesis was the same. It was let's reduce human suffering. Let's optimize human ability. Let's make this better by being thoughtful about how we reproduce. And let's bring whatever science we have, they had much less than we have, to bear on this question. And they would make, they did make the argument that Lothrop Stodd,
Starting point is 00:51:23 who was a Harvard professor and a brilliant, legit, brilliant guy historian. A lot about him was absolutely virtuous, I would say. But he was also a wild-eyed eugenicist because he was smart. He saw all this human suffering. He's like, let's get rid of it. We don't, it's something against people with Down syndrome, but we don't want more of them. That was his argument because it will reduce human suffering. Fewer kids with Down syndrome, less suffering. Well, it's a moral failure because the eugenicist, in my view, misconstrued the idea of, again, this idea of virtue with biology. There is not. no virtue in biological characteristics.
Starting point is 00:51:58 He wasn't making that case. He was making the case and the smart ones were. But Tucker, please. Less suffering. That's what they were saying. Less suffering. But less suffering isn't more virtuous. And it's hard for people to like, what does he mean by that?
Starting point is 00:52:12 Well, I agree. Just because, I mean, you know, we believe in a religion with suffering at the sound of it. We've all had loved ones that have passed away. God forbid from some disease. I mentioned my cousin. My grandmother's both out of cancer as well. My uncle died of a heart attack, right? When he was playing soccer with my dad, he was 45, he collapsed and he died from a heart attack,
Starting point is 00:52:36 which, by the way, is the number one killer in this country. Just because somebody had cancer, just because somebody has heart disease, just because somebody has a condition, schizophrenia, Alzheimer's, these conditions, again, they impact 200 million Americans. So this is the problem of our time, does not make them any less of a person. And so the fundamental moral failure, it was a moral failure of eugenics, which was misconstruing these things, which I did that it's better to reduce suffering. Better, that plain term of better doesn't come from the physical plane.
Starting point is 00:53:06 It comes from something beyond. But I'm not even sure that we're disagreeing. I think we're agreeing that there's no, that your physical condition is not a reflection of your moral value. No, but by the way, the eugenics has got that fundamentally wrong. Maybe I'm sure some did. They were consequentialists, though. That's actually important. Going back to the kind of different moral philosophies, if you look through the world that way, it actually helps articulate things.
Starting point is 00:53:27 They viewed it as the end justifies the means. We should actually do this forced sterilizations. We should make it constitutional. I think the ends justify the means was a much less common argument among the eugenesis as it is now among the technologists. That's for sure. That's very true. And so these attitudes not only have not been suppressed or eliminated, they've flowered into like the dominant attitude in the country. So they won.
Starting point is 00:53:52 I'm just saying, I'm not trying to, I'm just saying this idea that you can make people better and in fact that you should. No, no, but that's not what we're saying though. Remember, no, Tucker, Tucker, this is nuance, but it's really important for people to understand. You're saying people have the opportunity to do it. But people have the opportunity, nucleus,
Starting point is 00:54:08 we never say, hey, these are five embryos, this is the best embryo. We cannot. We are not divine. We can never do that. I understand. But the choices that people make are governed by a lot of things.
Starting point is 00:54:19 Of course. But one of the, you know, their intuition, their religious views. To be clear, first and foremost, it's the direct experience of suffering. The patients that come to us without fail, and to be clear, they might want to optimize for a trait as well. I'm not saying, of course they would, right? People think about these things realistically, but the first thing they care about is my mother had breast cancer, you know, my dad of prostate cancer, my grandfathered Alzheimer's. So I just think. My sister and schizophrenia. I get it. Right. And yeah, right. So you want to start with the lived experience of the patient and then go from there. But that's all baked in the cake. Every person has experienced suffering and every person has seen a loved one die if you live long enough. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:54:51 And I just want to be totally clear so I don't seem self-righteous, which I never want to be, if I had had the opportunity when my children were in utero or before to say no to schizophrenia and no to the things that I really fear is schizophrenia to the top of the list.
Starting point is 00:55:07 I think it's the cruelest thing. But also CF, which is in my family, all these things. By the way, I'm a carry for cystic fibrosis. A lot of people are. Yeah, a lot of people are, yeah. And I don't want my baby, God forbid, to have that.
Starting point is 00:55:19 Of course not. No, though, actually, the therapies for CF, you know, that's a whole separate conversation. I don't want to be boring. But anyway, I would just say, like all expecting parents, if I had had a chance to reduce or eliminate the risk that my children would have these horrible diseases or conditions, I would have taken it. Absolutely. How could you not? So I'm not judging anybody. I get it completely.
Starting point is 00:55:41 I would have done it. My question is, honestly, what's the effect of giving people this? choice, which is to improve in their minds, you say you're morally neutral on it, not attaching a value to deafness or hearing, but we're not... Okay. But people do, everybody does.
Starting point is 00:56:02 Everyone other than you. That's true. Everyone other than you does. No, no, no, but to be clear, we can have more philosophy and then say, but most people will reject the idea that there's this idea of conflating, reduced suffering, they would say that's better. Of course. And then we can play that out. So let's play that out. Let's play out how it actually is. So you tell me what
Starting point is 00:56:18 you imagine, because this is one of the biggest changes in human history. I will say, Tucker, I will say again that people will make different choices. I really want to say that. There's actually two parts of this argument. They're dodging, no, no, I'm not.
Starting point is 00:56:31 Some people will make different choices. So, a lot of, like... It's a random distribution of choices? Is that what you're saying? I'm not saying that. I'm not saying that. Okay. What I am saying, though, is people will bring...
Starting point is 00:56:43 So, when we think about this, like, to make it, like, more intuitive for people is if you think about, like, are, there's this concept in cell and molecular biology. Okay. It's called, it's basically this concept called, it's alluding me. Basically, that the more specialized something is, the more effective it is. So in biology, you see things specialize all the time, right?
Starting point is 00:57:06 So, for example, things begin stem cells, they become neurons, they become immune cells. Yes. They become different parts of the body, right? Because these bodies have different functions, and so you need different specializations. Right. Okay. And when you actually, I'm a big believer that like everything mirrors everything from the molecular to the celestial, everything, okay? And so let me keep going with this.
Starting point is 00:57:27 And so I remember what it is specialization breeds sophistication. Okay. That's true in cell and molecular biology, which is specialization breeds sophistication. The more specialized something, the more sophisticated it is. And so in a society, if you look at like, you know, people who are really high in their craft, right? like Alyssa Lou figure skating versus like an Einstein versus like an Elon versus like, I don't know, like an artist like Da Vinci. These people have very different sets of characteristics. And the way nature works is human beings cannot defy nature.
Starting point is 00:58:00 It's a seesaw. So let me give an example. Every single time people always say this to me. They say, oh, people will pick for IQ. Let me put aside my moral argument. Let me put aside my people won't actually all ways to pick for IQ. Let's actually assume that's the case. Let's assume that's the case.
Starting point is 00:58:15 Let's assume that's the case. Everyone will pick for IQ. One interesting thing about picking for IQ genetically is that when you pick for IQ, and it's interesting, when you tell patients this, you can see how they refactor the decisions. When you pick for IQ, you're actually picking against conscientiousness and extroversion genetically. It's a seesaw, right? It's almost like if you're playing like a FIFA my player or something and you make somebody stronger, they have less agility. So what happens is, and also you're making them genetically speaking more likely to be autistic. So these things are genetic. You can't, you can't, you can't, um, you can't defy these things, right? So these things go in opposite directions. So you start selecting for one, it actually takes these things away. So it starts becoming more of a value judgment. I understand. Wait, let me play this out. So let's assume that, to your point, there's a fashion of the day.
Starting point is 00:58:59 People are, you know, we've seen this with fashion. We see this in tech. We see this, you know, VC investors, they all allocate toward AI. You know, people end up wearing the same thing in Soho and New York. You know, how is this possible? Right, people will go to the same private schools. You were saying this, right? All these things end up kind of the taste follow through.
Starting point is 00:59:14 So let's assume all the rich people basically start optimizing for IQ, or everyone actually started optimizes for IQ. Not just rich people, everyone started optines for IQ. There's actually an evolutionary mechanism. It's called a frequency-dependent selection. What is frequency-dependent selection? What it basically means is that the rarer phenotype becomes relative to the other phenotypes. So in this case, for example, if everyone picked for IQ,
Starting point is 00:59:36 extraversion, and conscientious starts decreasing, okay, in terms of the prevalence of the population, the more valuable that phenotype becomes. In other words, the rarer that extroversion of consciousness becomes, the more valuable it actually becomes to actually flourish in a population. So you're arguing it's a self-correcting problem. And that's the key point, which is we think as humans, we can defy nature. We cannot defy nature.
Starting point is 01:00:04 We have to operate within nature's bounds, within evolution's bounds. We have to operate within this framework. So if that were true, then why did India, ban sex selective abortions. It's interesting because India specifically was about, so let's actually walk through this. India was about 5545 males to females, 5545, right? People actually think often was higher. And by the way, the natural rate of having a boy is actually slightly biologically higher than a girl.
Starting point is 01:00:31 So people think it's actually 50-50. It's actually like 52-48. So actually through that perspective, it is statistically significant, but it's actually not insanely high. And on that point also, which is actually interesting. a billion and a half people. It's... Yeah, it can, it can, it can, absolutely, over generations, but actually it's not, I think what's interesting here is, uh, it's, this is just a kind of a factoid, but, um, males, uh, babies, they tend to actually have the higher risk of basically dying at infancy. So it ends up happening, if you look at the general population, it's about
Starting point is 01:00:58 50-50, but actually biology has it that it's slightly urged toward males. Um, but let's take the sex example. Let's say it plays out that, um, you know, over many generations, people, let's say it wasn't outlawed, or people still practice it anyways, and people start picking across sex. It's actually the same phenomena, whereas the number of males, for example, come down, the number of females come down because of frequency-based selection, let's say you're in a population, just very simply, there's 70 males, 30 females, the value of female in that population is much higher. And basically, you can model this and show that each successive generation, there are certain sets of genetics that confer a slightly higher probability than
Starting point is 01:01:33 of having a female. And so that will actually propagate such that the genes that confer higher females would keep proliferating through until the population comes back to actually equanimity. So why did they ban it? Well, obviously, that's like a longer term evolutionary thing to saying that things were self-correct. So it actually wasn't self-correcting and it was making the society unstable. I mean, if human choice on questions of life and death and procreation at this granular level is self-correcting and it's just inherently good and there no downsides, then why did the biggest country in the world ban it? To be clear, I'm not saying that there is not short-term material consequence for like something like sex selection. Of course, there's
Starting point is 01:02:11 especially sex selection. I'm not saying that. But I'm saying... Why is that more significant than any other kind of selection? Sorry? Why is that unique? Like, you're talking... It's not, actually. Well, it's unique in that... Over IQ. I mean, these are deep, these are deep characteristics. Defining characteristics. It's actually interesting point you make on sex because if you look at sex, it's a way of kind of playing out what happens if people pick across traits, right? Because sex is it's not a disease, it's a choice. Depending on what you want, people make different choices, right? So it's actually a good kind of heuristic of how people will choose.
Starting point is 01:02:43 And on that point, actually, interestingly, sometimes we receive criticism from, for example, the American Society of Reproductive Medicine for saying that traits are not reproductive medicine. However, sex is ultimately a trait that people have been picking for the last 20 years. So there's a bit of this hypocrisy in medicine as well. I guess what I'm trying to get to really the core question, which is, is there a downside to plain God? Okay, first time, we're not playing God.
Starting point is 01:03:06 Well, of course there is. Of course we are. We're making choices that were not available to us until very recently that have never in human history been made by people ever, not one time. We cannot play God. God created us. God created everything here. We cannot. Let me be more precise and use a less charged way to describe it.
Starting point is 01:03:25 We are doing things that have never been done in human history. That's actually not true, I would argue, in this case. Well, it's very true. Because how long have tests two? babies IVF. I've been around since 1970s. So it's about 40 years, actually. And by the way, it's not like you look around.
Starting point is 01:03:40 You're like, oh, that's an IVF baby. I'm not attacking IVF. Yeah. I'm certainly not attacking IVF babies or people at all. I'm merely saying that in the scope of human history, this is brand new. When you say this, though, what do you mean? The ability to choose the traits of your children with this level of precision to get a certain number of embryos and say, I want the ones. that don't have these conditions, that do have these traits,
Starting point is 01:04:07 that has never been tried in human history, period. I would say, well, there's no debating that. I would caveat, no, I would caveat a little bit. When you, remember, you're picking from... Do the Sumerians do this? Wait, let me just be clear. You're picking from the pool that, so when you pick your partner, for example, you're setting the possible genetic pool.
Starting point is 01:04:24 So, for example, two short parents... This is what mating is. Yeah, two short parents, or I can have a tall baby, right? The same is actually true for genetic optimization. You can't have two short parents have a tall child with this technology. You can have a taller child. I understand, but we're, okay, those, but the core point is this is something, this is an acceleration, look, people want this. I wouldn't debate you there.
Starting point is 01:04:45 And people do calculate these things as they choose a mate. Of course, he's too dumb, I can't marry him. He's too short, I can't marry him. He's from, you know, whatever. There are lots of genetic qualities that people don't want to pass on. And in doing that, they're actually picking, by the way, the most important set of outcomes for their child. Because it's your partner. It's the other side of this.
Starting point is 01:05:02 Absolutely. Yeah. but never with this level of precision. Never has there been a menu where you can say, where you can identify qualities that you can't identify by smell or sight. You can't know so much of what you've just described except through brand new science. So I'm not even attacking that.
Starting point is 01:05:23 I'm merely asking a question that has to be asked, which is what are the downsides? So, I mean, we talked about the, I mean, you pointed out one of the downsides, which is like, okay, if everyone starts picking for a specific sex, for example, right? It can create population problems. And even if I would argue, and I did argue, hey, over time, this actually be self-corrected, which I think is true and valid.
Starting point is 01:05:49 So this will be self-corrected, right? But obviously, in the short term, there's still like an acute problem, right? But I would say actually IVF has been operating for, again, for 40 years. And other policies, like, for example, China's one-child policy, has led to much greater problems. IVF is still the way 2% of the way babies are born. I think your principal concern on where this can go awry. I mean, there's a long history in science fiction of people thinking, oh, you know,
Starting point is 01:06:20 oh, like, you know, I can, you know, Frankenstein, I mentioned Frankenstein. It's literally that. It's somebody saying, hey, huh, I could make life, right? And then how about life thing? How about Jurassic Park, actually, too, is this idea that, hey, I can do this. and then there's negative unforeseen consequences. I would argue both of those were consequentialists. I don't think that's science fiction.
Starting point is 01:06:37 I mean, hey, let's create Lyme disease. Hey, let's create, I don't know, let's strengthen this virus. Oh, gosh, it's out of the lab. Intentionally or not, it doesn't matter. You infect the world with COVID. That just happened five years ago. So it's like we don't need to look far to see the unintended consequences of emerging science. I'm not blaming anyone for it.
Starting point is 01:06:58 I think people have a terrible track record of foreseeing the consequences of their actions. we know that in our own sex lives, don't we? So I think we can just say it's important with something this powerful and potentially transformative to, A, admit that there will be unintended consequences because that's 100% true always and think through B what those consequences might be. That's all I'm saying. I agree. I think we should be tangible with them, though, and make sure people actually understand.
Starting point is 01:07:24 So, like, again, IVF is the way 2% of the way babies are born. IVF has been operating in the United States for about 40 years. This is not like... 40 years. It's 1970s. Oh, I was there, I remember. Yeah, yeah. The test two babies
Starting point is 01:07:38 was in the cover of Time magazine. It was, yeah. I mean, people don't call it that anymore, actually. Are there any consequences to that? To IVF? Yeah, have we studied the consequences? Yeah, they've actually tracked children. The study size are a little bit smaller from when I looked into it,
Starting point is 01:07:51 and then one might expect. But basically, they see no material difference, no? Is it true? That what? The studies are smaller than I expect. There's no measurable difference at all between children born from an IVF procedure and children conceive naturally. Obviously there's some environmental things.
Starting point is 01:08:06 You're taking averages. But yeah, when I looked into this, and I've obviously talked to a lot of scientists about this as well, they said, yeah, there's no difference, yeah, which is pretty amazing. But actually, I think it's a testament to nature. Well, we can track it over the course of the decades since I've, yeah. This isn't nature, of course. It's something that we are, well,
Starting point is 01:08:21 it's by definition not nature. It's something that people are doing in order to improve nature. Like, nature would be infertility. I'm against infertility. By the way, I'm not arguing for infertility. I'm just thinking it's Whatever it is, is not nature. It's the opposite of nature. I think we are operating within nature.
Starting point is 01:08:35 So let's go into the framework of God created these natural laws. We're using natural loss. We're not making life. We didn't go to a lab and make life. We're using the principles of nature, using the principles of predity, and we're applying them. It's still beautiful. It's still very beautiful. I'm not saying...
Starting point is 01:08:52 So I think we are using nature. I'm not saying it's bad or not beautiful. I'm just saying it's not nature anymore than nuclear weapons or nature. You can say, well, they're made from atoms, the essential building block of matter, okay, but we're exerting force and our will on nature to create an outcome that wouldn't occur if we didn't do that. So it's by definition on nature. The outcome could have actually occurred even if you didn't necessarily do it.
Starting point is 01:09:15 It could have just the baby could have happened that way. But also I would say that remember that there's gene editing, which is much further out, it's the idea that you can actually take an embryo and make it whatever you want, basically. Theoretically, we could talk about that, which is very, very different. So I think the concept of IVF clinics using this technology to give patients more information. When they're already getting information on their embryos, now we expand the information,
Starting point is 01:09:37 we can help deal with the chronic disease crisis in the United States, the rare disease crisis as well, right? Genics is unique. I appreciate the upside. No, I agree with you on the upside. I just want to know the downside. Yeah, the downside. And I don't see here any, there's no downside.
Starting point is 01:09:50 Of course there's downside. What do you imagine it might be? Well, I think let's play this out, okay? The first thing I'd say is that with IVF at its prevalence today at 2%, I think it's actually more or less fine. It's 2% is about 1 in 50 babies. I think I'm going to outline the scenario where I think there's a lot more risk and where human reproduction is going to materially change.
Starting point is 01:10:11 You might argue that you might argue this is a material change. I would argue IVF was the principal material change. You're arguing that it's a material change because you're saying that we're going to have less chronic disease, lower health care costs, less suffering and that's all good. Patients can choose that. Well, you've argued that will be the result. And you're right. It will be the result.
Starting point is 01:10:30 for it. I just want to say I'm for it. I'm just saying that whenever I hear the upside, as you would in any scenario, including your personal family investments, like tell me the downside. If someone says, well, there's no downside, then I'm like, I don't know if I trust you anymore. So what's the downside? Again, I will articulate the downside. It's just I have to explain No, you're going to blame some other technology. No, I'm not going to blame some other technology. Gene editing's bad. No. But what about the technology that you're offering has an upside. I totally agree with you. And that will be real and I'll support it.
Starting point is 01:11:05 Yeah. I would support, I don't know, a lot of things. But what's the downside? Like, you must have thought about that. Of course. Of course. I mean, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the technology can be exploited by centralized bodies to try to control reproduction. Yes.
Starting point is 01:11:26 That is the downside. That is the story of the 20th century. Sorry for getting emphatic. But it's just like, yes, that is the downside. seen the downside, we've experienced the downside, but to be clear, but to be clear, that is a moral failure. That is not a failure of the technology. I've established that eugenics, for example, was decades before genetics. Yeah, it's a distinction without a difference in my view. But what you're saying, what you're saying is, without saying it explicitly, that people misuse the creation,
Starting point is 01:11:54 and they use it for good, but they also use it for bad. And that's just how people are. And they've always been that way and they will always be that way. So with that in mind, I don't think it's just, I totally agree that, of course, centralized powers whoever they are. Yeah. Well, yeah, yeah. I'm not even sure who they are, but they clearly exist. Governments, principally. I mean, that's the 20th century or the Epstein class that runs the governments or whoever these, these entities are, they, they, yeah, that's bad. I totally agree. But the experience of India shows us that given choice, people will also make the wrong decisions as individuals. So I'm just wondering what those consequences might be.
Starting point is 01:12:37 Let me just say, I'm interested in this because I have hunting dogs, and I've had them my whole life, and hunting dogs are bred for certain qualities. And I watch it carefully, and dogs have such short life cycles relative to people that you can kind of, in your lifetime, watch this happen. But they're bred for certain. I have flushing dogs, spaniels,
Starting point is 01:12:54 and they're bred to, you know, work close to you, find the bird, jump the bird, retrieve the bird. Yeah. If you are not very careful about breeding them or if you breed them only for certain specific qualities, you can wind up destroying the dog. Yeah. And this is well known in animal husbandry. It's well known in bird hunting. It's well known among anybody who deals with animals. And I don't see people as any different.
Starting point is 01:13:19 And I know that there are massive consequences to the dog. You get dogs that die of cancer at five. You get dogs with hip displays. Or you get dogs with unexplained rage that bite your children. Like, we can't foresee with any precision the effects of our tinkering with reproduction. Absolutely. Let me actually give a real example of this. So in China, the scientist who was known for using gene editing to engineer the first babies, actually, Dr. He.
Starting point is 01:13:46 What he did was he engineered the CCR5 gene. I believe that's what the gene was called. And he used CRISPR. CRISPR is a bacterial immune response system. It stands for, you know, clustered, regularly, interspaced, short palindromic repeats. Basically refers to the set of palindromic DNA sequences in a bacteria. Yeah. Okay.
Starting point is 01:14:05 And you use that to make a genital device called CRISPR. And he basically used CRISPR. Oh, I remember very well. And CRISPR is composed of two things. It's composed of like a guide. It's like basically imagine it takes the device to the right part of the DNA, which is like a scissors. And then it, excuse me, it has a guide. which takes the CRISPR to the right part of DNA,
Starting point is 01:14:25 and there's an endonucleus, which basically cuts the DNA. A little bit of technical explanation. Basically, you can use bacterial immune response system, harnesses as a geneal device, okay? And this is what the scientist did. And I'm obviously, you know, about the story. And he went and he actually engineered human embryos. Okay?
Starting point is 01:14:42 It's going on now. In China? Other parts of the world, too. So basically what he did was he knocked out the CCR5 gene, and his justification for knocking out, knocking out this specific gene was that it would make the children basically resistant to HIV AIDS. That was what he said. This is really interesting for a lot of reasons. One is because you didn't need gene editing to do that. You could have actually just done that with existing genetic technology that was
Starting point is 01:15:11 much cheaper, much less expensive. But even putting that aside, getting to the fundamental thing that you're articulating, which is the unintended consequences. When you actually optimize for the knocking out that specific gene, you're also opening up the susceptibility of that baby to other infectious disease. Because what CCR5 does is it encodes for a specific immune receptor that basically, when destroyed, it makes it easier for other pathogens and to basically infect you. In other words, there's this, the dangerous side of this to your point is that balance, which is in trying to do something good, what he deemed to be virtuous, if you will, it actually potentially could have very severe consequences on the children's health.
Starting point is 01:15:51 And so I think that's a very real, tangible example that we've seen of some of the dangers and, you know, balancing act, the balancing act that is nature. And that's really important to say. What about in your life, have you ever wound up with something that you didn't expect and maybe didn't want and found it to be a great blessing over time? Yeah, absolutely. I mean, meditation. No, but something that's something you, presumably you chose to try it.
Starting point is 01:16:17 I think, you know, sometimes you, you know, a broader force guides you to these things. Yeah. You know, the experience of having children is the most profound example of that, I think, if you ask any parent, or most parents, many parents will tell you, like, I didn't expect this at all. Yeah. I didn't grow up with girls. Didn't have a mom. Didn't have sisters. Didn't want girls.
Starting point is 01:16:37 I don't understand girls like my wife, but don't want girls. End up having a tone of girls. Never would have chose that. Yeah. And really one of the great experiences of my life. truly. I mean that. And I'm not embarrassed to say this because my girls don't I feel this way. But anyway, I never would have, if I'd had the choice, just like, I don't get girls. I can't be the father of girls. Like what? Yeah. And yet that, again, turned out to be this great blessing. And I'm really glad I didn't have the choice. Have you ever had an experience like that?
Starting point is 01:17:10 I mean, yeah, I think some of the best things that happen in life are not things that you can control. It's part of the vine. Yes. Yes, absolutely. Absolutely. 100%. And sometimes there are things that, man, you don't want at all. But it's actually good for you. Yeah. It's the best for you. It's the best thing for you. Yeah. The thing that you want is another thing that you need. So maybe if you get to be the author of your own story and of your own children, if you, the more control you have, the more you get what you want, the more totally you're destroyed. Maybe it's not good for you to get everything you want. That's been my experience. Tucker, remember though, like, genetics obviously is not deterministic, right? So there's two other parts of life. Wait, what? You were just telling me it was we can get rid of all these diseases, which I'm poor.
Starting point is 01:18:02 But Tucker, a good example is like lung cancer, you smoke, increase your risk of lung cancer. There's some genetics component, but it can be both. Or heart disease. Your enjoyment of life. I just want to put in a good word for smoking, if I could. Heart disease as well, right? Obviously, there's a, there's a, there's a, family history component to it, but there's also like what you eat, how much you exercise, these things. And so under the framework, you think, okay, like what I think is really important in life, in life, which again goes well beyond genetics. We're not genetic determinists here, obviously. That's just not reality. Again, I will go back to the spiritual and cultivation of
Starting point is 01:18:36 the soul. That cultivation of the soul to eventually, hopefully divine virtue, union with God, right? that is to be able to everyone independent of their biological characteristics and so I think it's important not to again conflate optimising your specific outcome but you've made that point and I so appreciate it
Starting point is 01:18:53 but that point is such that that is the point that is the point that the union with God ultimately is that is what life is about so you're not actually removing like this idea that like you can like if there was a world where somehow parents could
Starting point is 01:19:05 perfectly predict the baby's going to be like this and this and this you can't physically you can't you can't you can't encode the soul is what I'm saying. It doesn't come from biology. We know a lot. So there's stochasticity always is what I'm arguing. Yeah, I mean, but you're arguing the margins. I mean, what you're saying is right. It's true. There's no debating what you're saying. It's fact. And I appreciate that you're saying it. Yes. But it's equally true that we are exercising powers that we didn't have until very recently and that we know more than we ever have. And I just think, and I don't think we can stop it. I don't think there's any way we can stop it. If you weren't doing this and the gene editors weren't doing it. I mean, I don't like that more philosophy generally. Like I actually, you're right. I actually think people, I think people way overshoot that.
Starting point is 01:19:45 I can't stop it. People way overshoot the idea that, oh, technology is inevitable. Technology is not inevitable. This is driving me crazy. People make choices that drive technology forward. Technology does not just happen. It's been, you know, 20 years of really 15 years, probably, since, you know, some of these more advanced screenings has existed. But they've never actually been adopted, right?
Starting point is 01:20:09 So the idea that technology naturally progresses is it's a narrative created by Silicon Valley. to try to justify raising more money. And by the way, taking away more responsibility. No, people make choices that drive technology forward. I think you're to an extent right. I mean, this is a whole separate conversation. I want to bore our remaining viewers with. But I do think we make choices.
Starting point is 01:20:27 That's absolutely right. And it's incumbent on us to try to make the right choices for ourselves and those around us. Okay, all true. Those choices matter. Also true. We are also products at the time in which we live in the systems in which we operate. So those things are equally true. Again, I don't want to be boring.
Starting point is 01:20:42 But I agree with you. Our choices are important. But there's also, again, a lack of respect for what we don't know, which makes me very uncomfortable in science. And one of the reasons that I think that we should put a lot of doctors and scientists in prison as soon as we can is because they've really hurt us over the last, say, six years by not acknowledging what they don't know, overstating their own foresight about things. that no human being can know. Like, there's no respect for the limits of the human mind, okay? And suddenly we have these enormous powers that are not actually matched to our wisdom at all. And I just, I just want to say out loud I'm really worried about it.
Starting point is 01:21:29 And I think certain individuals should be punished for doing this. Like, the guys who made COVID in the lab, they're not in jail? Like, what? Does that bother you? Do you think that's a lesson? Does that tell us anything? Yeah, I just definitely a lesson. We have to be responsible stewards of the technology.
Starting point is 01:21:46 Should there be punishment for people who, like, kill millions through their foolishness? Yeah, I mean, I think the key is that, like, again, genetics can program for somebody to be smarter, but it cannot make somebody wise. And the idea that you can genetically encode somebody's life, again, that's not true. Like, nature, like in the DNA, in the nucleus, that's not true. So I want to be clear that you're not controlling the life outcome of your child. You're not going to be like, okay, now the child's going to become, you know, LeBron James, and they're going to be on the star. That will come from the virtue of hard work, et cetera.
Starting point is 01:22:22 So genetics is important. Genetics is important. It plays a factor. It plays a role. But I'm not going to sit here and say, oh, genetics is everything. It's not. But nobody's making the case that it is. No, but the argument that you can control, parents can control their child's life trajectory.
Starting point is 01:22:34 It would suggest that genetics is pretty deterministic, but I'm saying it's not. I'm actually making the opposite argument, which is you have no freaking idea what's going to happen. when you tamper with this stuff. We actually know way less than we think we do. We have less control than we imagine and that we should proceed with that in mind. That's my only argument. But my question is much more specific. You said the technology is not inevitable.
Starting point is 01:22:53 I kind of agree with you. It's not inevitable, no. We certainly have an obligation to do our best. Yeah. For the people who didn't do their best and who hurt others like the whole world, like the guys who designed COVID in the Wuhan lab, which they did, we've established that. shouldn't there be some punishment for them?
Starting point is 01:23:11 And wouldn't that help future generations make wiser decisions if they saw that there were consequences to being thoughtless with technology? I think generally speaking, the kind of history, at least like the modern history of like Silicon Valley, has gone from, I think it had some idea of kind of virtue ethics, right?
Starting point is 01:23:32 Like, you know, Google back in the day was don't be evil. If you say that today, you'll kind of be laughed at. That was like their corporate motto. You had, Paul Graham had his, you know, hackers and painters, this idea of that that was kind of this, like, kind of beautiful early Silicon Valley spirit. There was another case of Steve Jobs, 2005, Stanford commencement address. He ended it by saying, stay hungry, stay foolish. Basically humility, have humility.
Starting point is 01:24:03 Open yourself up to the world, not just the natural world, but the divine world. a lot of the Silicon Valley ideology has moved from sort of hackers and painters to, you know, maybe capitalists and, you know, politicians or the like. In other words, it's moved into kind of a techno-capitalism, this idea that technology is inevitable, this idea that capitalism is inherently good, like it's inherently good if something grows. I completely, and you can say it with AI companies all the time, they'll celebrate, oh, we hit 100 million AR in, you know, two days or something. and it fundamentally mistakes speed and the rate of which something grows with value, right? Cancer grows very quickly.
Starting point is 01:24:43 It's horrible. And so I think there's this fundamental idea that, you know, this kind of grow, grow, grow, grow, that inherently the consequences, like, you know, be damned, just grow. Growth is inherently good. I think that fundamental philosophy is so bad. Well, it's a self-justification. Yes. So, but I wonder where it grows from. So I think you described crisply and well, the evolution of the attitudes in Silicon Valley, generally speaking.
Starting point is 01:25:07 Yeah. From, hey, this is going to liberate everybody. Yes. Good. To, hey, this hikes GDP. And I have got a massive place in Atherton, therefore it's good. And those are definitely different justifications. And I wonder to what you attribute the change.
Starting point is 01:25:24 Like, how did that happen? How did you go from one place to another? And here's my thesis in one sentence. Power. Yeah. When you get a lot of power, you get corrupted. Yeah. Power corrupts, yeah.
Starting point is 01:25:36 So there's no greater power than determining what kind of kids people are going to have. So like, are you worried at all? Again, we don't determine what kind of kids will have. We don't. Overpopulations. We don't. No, we don't because people are making their own choices. We don't make the choice for them.
Starting point is 01:25:50 People are making their own choices. You could easily make the choice. No, we don't. We don't. But you could. I'm trying it. You could just say we're only testing for these three things or whatever. you could you design the screen also remember tiger you design the outcome of
Starting point is 01:26:02 populations no virtue is not in bio virtue is not in biology okay so so no we do not encode populations because human beings can't like that is that it it makes a mistake as it means like we are god we are not god we are not going to affect the nature of people so that's an inescapable fact and i think it's important to just like wear the mantle like this is what we're doing we're changing the nature of people we're going to try to make them better nature is a very very very good tricky word. The nature of people come from God. It doesn't come from genetics. The substance of people. Their intelligence, their height, their lifespan. That's a key distinction though, because ultimately any human being should want, again, greater spiritual cultivation. Okay, but I'm just
Starting point is 01:26:42 saying you are part of not you alone or even substantially, but you're part of a trend in science that will change the nature of people. So I do think it's worth just admitting that because then once you realize the burden on your shoulders, you can bear up under it. Do you think? I think we, yeah, definitely this technology. I just want to be very careful with the word nature versus biological characteristics. I agree that we're changing by lots of characteristics. How long people live?
Starting point is 01:27:10 You're changing that. So that alone is how tall people are, how well they do in the SAT. But again, it's not deterministic in that way. It's not like you can look at somebody's DNA and be like, oh, they're going to get a 1570 in their SAT. But I agree with you. They're overpopulations. And we're talking about populations. and you're saying it's, you know, IVF is 2% or whatever,
Starting point is 01:27:26 but I'm just saying the technology, we can see where this is going, you offer people a chance to have children who are healthier and smarter, and they're going to take it. And I've already admitted that I would have taken it because I love my children. Yeah. It's that simple. So we know this is going to happen if the technology exists and it's widely available. And so that puts you, and not just you, of course, this is hardly an attack,
Starting point is 01:27:47 but it puts you in a position of having power over the course of humanity, over the evolution of humanity or watching humanity change at the individual level and like that's a big burden man that's a burden that only God bore before like 20 years ago we are not God and we can never be God good well that's a good start we are not God we are not God but you see it as profound absolutely
Starting point is 01:28:11 yeah I mean I mean to see patients who have had some again I use use the Huntington's example, right, to see a loved one die at age 25 because their brain decays and then to never want to have a child. Huntington's is really hard. And then to be able to use the technology, the emotion, you know, the miracle that they can have a baby, basically. And that's that's amazing. It is amazing. But I, with respect, I think having watched, I mean, I was out in Silicon
Starting point is 01:28:47 Valley in the 90s covering this and I knew the people, I still know some of them, they were totally fixated on the upside. Yeah. In a good way. Yeah. They were like, this gives the Encyclopedia Britannica, you probably didn't know what that is, but it's a physical encyclopedia that's set on your shelf and costs like thousands of dollars. That's replaced by this CD-ROM.
Starting point is 01:29:06 You know, this collection of ones and zeros. And like, it's incredible the amount of information. People will be so much better informed. And now you look 30 years later and that's like definitely upsides to technology, but also downsides. Well, we're susceptible to the same force because we're human. Well, that's exactly the argument I'm making. Yeah, I agree.
Starting point is 01:29:25 Yeah, we are sort of the same force. It's how can we continue to do that spiritual work? Because it is spiritual work, right, to cultivate the soul to make sure we maintain in these values that I've been articulated. I totally agree. So here's my final question. I'll stop torturing you. Okay. I think you've done such a great job, actually.
Starting point is 01:29:49 But thanks. It's nothing to do with you. I'm just worried about these things and you're smart and you've, again, for the third time, thought about them to a surprising degree for a guy who's also trying to build a company, I'm impressed. Thank you. But if we're going to proceed, one hopes, with this kind of science in a way that creates rather than destroys, then we need to keep in mind, as you said, 20 times, the spiritual dimension. Yes. But the spiritual dimension is a dividing point. Some things are good for the spirit and some things are bad for the spirit.
Starting point is 01:30:22 some things are consistent with virtue. Some things are not. And if we believe in God, we believe God prefers some outcomes over others. God has rules. It's the nature of God. So will there be an attempt to say, no, these are the rules? Like you can't test for this certain thing. You can't make this choice.
Starting point is 01:30:42 You have to constrain people's choices at a certain point if you're going to remain consistent with any kind of ethic. Yeah. No, I thought a lot about that. It's very tricky. because you need... Just as India did. India said it was a billion people.
Starting point is 01:30:55 You can't make that choice, sorry. No, that's very tricky. It's very tricky and very complicated. I think the key thing that we have to do as a business and the moral line that people can hold us to is nucleus has not, is not, and will never say that one embryo is better than another embryo.
Starting point is 01:31:15 We just won't. Because again, we cannot mistake instrumental value with moral value. They're different things. And I think in deeply recognizing that and deeply realizing, by the way, the indeterministic nature of genetics as well, as I said, heart disease,
Starting point is 01:31:30 you can have a bad diet, you can exercise lung cancer, even for things like schizophrenia, as I mentioned, strong genetic components, but you can take, you know, weed actually has made people more schizophrenic, for example. So there's an environmental component as well. And so I think you have to have the deep humility
Starting point is 01:31:46 in saying, there's no better, maintain that moral philosophy. that's the that is the foundation of from for me that's the foundation. You can't say it's better to be non-schizophrenic than schizophrenic? I don't think it's for me to say though. I also, again, I also don't think though, to be clear, when we use the term better, we start to apply in moral value. And again, I don't think more value lies in the realm of biological characteristics.
Starting point is 01:32:10 I don't think so. So there's no moral guide at all. No, that's not true. There's universal morality, which is natural law and divine virtue. You can't say that it's better not to have schizophrenia than to have schizophrenia. you. Well, again, when we say better, I think we're just like defining differently. I think it's better in the sense that it reduces suffering. Okay. Well, that's your measure, then it's better. Exactly. But what's your measure? Exactly. But it's honestly better in terms of their word. So this is totally immoral. This is literally amoral. It has no reference. No, it's not at all. Because everything has a spirit, as I said. Just because there's the physical world and then there's each thing has a divine spirit to it. Right. So each thing has some virtue or opposite of virtue, vice, for example. Right. That's true. That's a true thing. But again, these things are not actually incompatible with each other.
Starting point is 01:32:49 are actually compatible. But as a company, can you say there's anything you won't do? As a, on behalf of nucleus, I think, well, when you say anything we won't do, meaning like providing- You just said biology has no moral reference because everything has a spirit. I'm just wondering, is there like a line? We're like, characteristics don't. We're not doing that, period, because it's wrong.
Starting point is 01:33:11 We're not providing an analysis, for example. Like, we're not providing some analysis. That's what you mean. Or you mean like genetic, we're not going to make certain behavior easier. When you say certain behavior, I mean picking for a specific characteristic. I don't know. I could manufacture fentanyl for a living and say,
Starting point is 01:33:25 I'm not forcing people to take it. It's their choice. But I would say I'm not manufacturing fentanyl because it's bad. It's just inherently bad. It degrades people. And in some cases, kills them. So I'm not doing that. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:33:36 So I don't know that it is it enough to say let the people decide? No, it's not. You have to be careful. Like giving IQ analysis, for example, right? We've gone through many, many iterations the best way of doing it. And we sort of slow rolled it out. principally because we didn't want me people to misunderstand it. We don't want people to think, because again, genetically it's just like not possible in the same way that there's always environmental components,
Starting point is 01:33:59 that you can just like look at somebody's DNA and guess the SAT score. That's like people's very simplistic model, which is like, right? So I'm saying that the way we have a responsibility to very carefully communicate that result. So the IVF clinic, the patient, the physician, everyone understands it. And then when I think when people understand it, it takes it from sort of the sensationalist things and just grounds it. Will you shift the moral responsibility from yourself to your customers? No, we're still morally responsible. We ship a product.
Starting point is 01:34:23 In what way? I could make a product and say, oh, this embryo is better than this embryo. I mean, that would be principally the most immoral line that we could cross. I could say, for example, this embryo is going to be super, super, super, super smart, right? No, we're careful in the way we say things responsible. Well, that's just a false claim, right? Yeah, I mean, it would be false, but also like people... But what you're saying is that the moral decisions rest with the customer's not with you.
Starting point is 01:34:43 They decide what's better. Is it better to have a kid with Down syndrome or not? They decide. You're not going to have any role in the moral decision. Patients can't, so again, there's no moral value because that comes from God, but patients can decide instrumental value, right? Like going back to the deaf couple, the deaf couple deemed it to be best, right, for what they want for the outcome they're optimizing for.
Starting point is 01:35:01 In this case, best means optimizing for the set of biological characteristics for some outcome, right? For example, somebody might want their daughter to be shorter to be a gymnast, for example. Somebody might want their son to be tall to be an NBA player. Someone else might say, I don't care how athletic they are, I don't care how pretty they are, I want them to be an academic and, you know, study really hard their entire life. Depending on those things, as I mentioned in cell biology, specialization breeds sophistication. You realize very quickly, very intuitively, that the value of a phenotype is contingent to its environment.
Starting point is 01:35:32 I get it. So this is what it comes back to. It's like it's up to, it's up to them the parents to decide what is their instrumental value that they map to these phenotypes and to pick. It's up to your job to take fentanyl. No, I get it. I get it. I just hope it works. I think the worst things that I've ever.
Starting point is 01:35:48 ever done are the things with the greatest promise, like the iPhone. Like I got, I was so psyched for the iPhone. I was like, I don't need a computer. Yeah. I can work in my living room. Next thing, you know, you can't have a conversation with your wife. Yeah, social media is, it's really bad. But it's bad because it's good. Benzodiazepines are great. That's why they're terrible. Does that make sense? Benzodiazepines are like the greatest drug. Have you ever taken a benzodiazepine? I took it one time in high school. One of my, a kid on my hall in boarding school, his dad was a pharmacist and he had volume and I was like, I'll take anything. You know, whatever I was a child.
Starting point is 01:36:24 I was an idiot. I take this thing. I was like, that's the greatest thing I've ever taken and it was so good. I never took it in because it freaked me out because there was no downside. Yeah. Literally all of your like voices in your head, any woman listening will know what I'm talking about, like the things are like, ah, whatever, going out of the background. Silenced. Everything's fine.
Starting point is 01:36:42 You're not like stoned. You're not out of it. You're just like, great. You're improved. you're your best self. And my animal sense, even in 10th grade, I was like, that's bad. Yeah. Super bad.
Starting point is 01:36:55 Whereas you do other drug, you do cocaine, stay up all night doing cocaine. You suffer the next day. And so it's really clear this is not good, right? Benzos are the best. And that's why they're the most addictive, most dangerous, most society-destroying product that we make. Yeah. Does that make sense?
Starting point is 01:37:14 Yeah, that makes sense. Yeah. The badness is in direct proportion to the promise, the goodness. Yes. Yes. And then there is a moral character of the person giving out to that drug. And in social media case, too, talking about moral philosophy, optimizing for clicks and dopamine, you end up falling a consequentialist framework, right? Because there's no virtue. You end up falling a consulateous framework and justifies the mean to the point that everybody's scrolling and liking and clicking all day.
Starting point is 01:37:40 100%. So it's the question that you're asking is how do you... there is this problem of power because power corrupts absolutely. Absolutely. There's a problem of Silicon Valley, which is there's a promise, but then you underestimate the thing. It's like, how do you maintain virtue? Basically the question is, how do you maintain virtue?
Starting point is 01:37:57 How do you maintain your soul and your spirit despite these pressures? What's the answer? Well, one, it's really hard. I imagine, and I'm hoping to practice for nucleus and for hopefully this industry, it's the, it's praying, it's meditation, it's deep, deep humility. with realizing going back to what I said, there's a raindrop. If you think that the raindrops entire world, you're figuring out the entire ocean. That's why I come back to.
Starting point is 01:38:25 Yeah, well, you have a lot of authority. You have a lot of power for a young man more than much more than I ever will. And so use it wisely. And thank you for your thoughtfulness and you're willing to have this conversation. And I'm sure it's been hellish for you, but you've done a great job. Thank you, thank you. I appreciate it. Thanks.

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