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GREGORY STOCK 
Gregory Stock has explored the larger evolutionary significance of humanity’s recent technological progress for many years, and he examined the subject at length in his 1993 book, Metaman: The Merging of Humans and Machines into a Global Superorganism (Simon & Schuster). Following its publication, he spent a year at Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs looking specifically at the implications of recent breakthroughs in molecular genetics. It was as an outgrowth of that work that he teamed up with John Campbell to organize this conference, the first ever on human germline engineering. Currently Dr. Stock is directing the Program on Science, Technology, and Society at UCLA and is a visiting senior fellow at the Center for the Study of Evolution and the Origin of Life.

Stock received a Ph.D in biophysics from Johns Hopkins University and an M.B.A. from Harvard Business School. He has published research papers on developmental biology, limb regeneration, and laser light scattering, and has designed computer software for electronic banking networks. He has appeared on hundreds of radio and television shows from Larry King to Good Morning Australia to discuss various aspects of technology and human values, and is the author of four books besides Metaman. His exploration of values, The Book of Questions, was a NY Times bestseller that has now sold over 2 million copies and been translated into 15 languages.

email: gstock@ess.ucla.edu

Program on Science Technology and Society, UCLA. Phone: (310) 825 9715 Fax: (310) 825 1170

Link to Hotwired debate on Cloning and Germline Engineering - Gregory Stock and Glenn McGee
 
Link to National Public Radio story on Human Germline Engineering - Interviews with Gregory Stock French Anderson and others.

Link to Suddeutsche Zeiturng interview with Gregory Stock

Link to Biofutur Article on Human Germline Engineering - Gregory Stock

Link to National Institute of Standards and Technology Advanced Technology Program - Paper on commercial development of human gemline engineering by Gregory Stock