Moonshot Radio [S1:E3] - Andrew Hessel: Programming Life & the Future of Genomics
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About this listen
What happens when life itself becomes programmable?
In this episode of Moonshot Radio, host Linda Du speaks with Andrew Hessel: futurist, synthetic biologist, and co-founder of GP-write; about the radical shift underway in biology, where DNA is increasingly treated like software and living systems can be designed, edited, and built from scratch.
Andrew explains how synthetic (or “digital”) biology is transforming medicine, food, and industry, and why the ability to read and write genetic code could reshape evolution itself. From cancer-fighting viruses and personalized “n-of-one” gene therapies to human cloning, longevity, and biological banking, this conversation explores both the promise and the peril of engineering life.
We also dive into the ethical, regulatory, and security challenges that come with unprecedented biological power:
– Who regulates programmable life?
– How do we prevent misuse, lab leaks, or bio-engineered pandemics?
– What happens when individuals — not governments — can design viruses or proteins?
Andrew shares insights from his work on Humane Genomics, the future of personalized cancer treatments, and why biodefense and global cooperation are now existential priorities. The conversation expands beyond biology into big questions about mortality, digital twins, cloning, AI-assisted parenting, and what it might truly mean to pursue immortality.
At its core, this episode asks a fundamental question:
As we gain god-like powers over life, are we ready for the responsibility?
🎙️ Guest: Andrew Hessel
🧬 Topics: Synthetic Biology, Genomics, Biosecurity, Longevity, AI & Life, Ethics of Engineering Life
🌍 Part of Moonshot Radio, a podcast exploring the people and technologies reprogramming our future.
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