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Immune Ethics

Part of the Elements in Bioethics and Neuroethics series
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The immune system maintains homeostasis within human organisms and protects them from pathogenic threats.

But sometimes it cannot provide this protection on its own, and vaccines may be necessary to ensure our health and survival.

Immune functions can become dysregulated and result in autoimmune disease or multi-system damage.

Pharmacological and genomic interventions may activate or modulate immune functions to prevent these outcomes.

This Element is an analysis and discussion of some of the ethical implications of these interventions.

After describing the main components of innate and adaptive immunity and how it might be enhanced, it considers the potential benefit and harm from vaccines against addiction and viruses, immunotherapy for cancer, neuroimmunomodulating agents to prevent or treat neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative diseases, and gene editing of immunity to enable xenotransplantation and prevent infectious disease.

The Element concludes with an exploration of a possible outcome of natural competition between humans and microbes.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1009304593 / 9781009304597
Paperback / softback
616.079
03/08/2023
United Kingdom
English
75 pages.