I certainly hope we can do this one day. The biobanks that gather data used to make the predictors we used to identify variants for editing don’t really focus on much besides disease. As a result, our predictors for personality and interpersonal behavior aren’t yet very good.
I think as the popularity of embryo selection continues to increase, this kind of data will be gathered in exponentially increasing volumes, at which point we could start to think about editing or selecting for the kinds of traits you’re describing.
There will be an additional question to what degree parents will decide to edit for those traits. We’re going to have a limited budget for editing and for selection for quite some time, so parents will have to choose to make their child kinder and more benificent to others at the expense of some other traits. The polygenicity of those personality traits and the effect sizes of the common alleles could have a very strong effect on parental choices; if you’re only giving up a tiny bit to make your child kinder then I think most parents will go for it. If it’s a big sacrifice because it requires like 100 edits, I think far fewer will do so.
It may be that benificence towards others will make these kinds of children easier to raise as well, which I think many parents would be interested in.
I certainly hope we can do this one day. The biobanks that gather data used to make the predictors we used to identify variants for editing don’t really focus on much besides disease. As a result, our predictors for personality and interpersonal behavior aren’t yet very good.
I think as the popularity of embryo selection continues to increase, this kind of data will be gathered in exponentially increasing volumes, at which point we could start to think about editing or selecting for the kinds of traits you’re describing.
There will be an additional question to what degree parents will decide to edit for those traits. We’re going to have a limited budget for editing and for selection for quite some time, so parents will have to choose to make their child kinder and more benificent to others at the expense of some other traits. The polygenicity of those personality traits and the effect sizes of the common alleles could have a very strong effect on parental choices; if you’re only giving up a tiny bit to make your child kinder then I think most parents will go for it. If it’s a big sacrifice because it requires like 100 edits, I think far fewer will do so.
It may be that benificence towards others will make these kinds of children easier to raise as well, which I think many parents would be interested in.