Synthetic biology employs design and engineering principles to create novel organisms in a much more effective way than earlier biotechnology. One branch of synthetic biology – xenobiology – even develops chemically altered genetic codes and amino acids, which are supposed to effectively isolate the new life from the naturally existing. The synthetic biology research agenda also includes the use of non-living materials to build novel life-forms from scratch.

Which concepts of life, which values and worldviews underlie the design and engineering of novel life-forms? What could be the conceptual, ethical, and social implications of a widespread use of synthetic biology? To what ends should synthetic biology be deployed?

Consequences and implications of synthetic biology have been researched by philosophers and social scientists alike – often at the request of biologists sensitive to the political and economical need for the public acceptance of their research. Yet, how can research policies help to maintain a plurality of evaluative positions?

Join the discussion of what synthetic biology is all about, of its metaphors of creating life, its visions of saving lives, and of the question how social consequences of new techno-scientific fields can or should be evaluated.

In English
With

Arnold Sauter (Deputy Head of the Office of Technology Assessment (TAB) at the German Bundestag and Leader of the TAB project ‘Synthetic Biology’)

Inna Kouper (research scientist at Indiana University, Pervasive Technology Institute)

Sheref S. Mansy (assistant professor of biochemistry at the Centre for Integrative Biology, University of Trento, working on artificial chemical systems that mimic cellular life)

Röbbe Wünschiers (professor of biotechnology at the University of Applied Sciences Mittweida, applying a synthetic biology approach to utilize solar energy for hydrogen gas production with cyanobacteria)

Organized by

A public event closing the BMBF-funded International Summer School Analyzing the Societal Dimensions of Synthetic Biology (www.ta-synbio-summerschool.de), organized by Kristin Hagen, Margret Engelhard (EA European Academy of Technology and Innovation Assessment GmbH), and Georg Toepfer (Center for Literary and Cultural Research Berlin), in cooperation with the ICI Berlin

The event, like all events at the ICI Berlin, is open to the public, free of charge. The audience is presumed to consent to a possible recording on the part of the ICI Berlin. If you would like to attend the event yet might require assistance, please contact Event Management.

KV Synthetic Biology