Abstract
The concept of nature and naturalness plays an important role in academic and public bioethical discussions. Given the obvious weakness of arguments that are based on a genetic and/or totalizing view of nature, the immense and repeated efforts to criticize them demand explanation. The repeated critique of such weak arguments and the tendency to avoid the category of nature can be explained by political motivations. While an unjustified appeal to nature, or a description of genome editing as unnatural, is of course problematic, we cannot develop the contours of a responsible genome policy without the dimension of nature. I work with the hypothesis that our relation to nature is in itself deeply normative and political, and conclude that a responsible biopolicy requires us to bring the question of nature back into the center of our political philosophy and our liberal democracies.