It is interesting to wonder if they'd call us gods in a good way though. Perhaps they might see it as 'playing god' instead. HN being a techie crowd tends to skew this a bit, but it's worth remembering that genetic engineering is still pretty controversial to the average person: https://www.pewresearch.org/internet/2022/03/17/americans-ar...
When I was 18 (early 90s) and applying for university, the admissions office asked me what I wanted to do and I said "play god with DNA". Sure it sounds arrogant, but I knew that gene therapy would become a thing and if it worked, eventually people would apply it recreationally (by which I mean, to change your phenotype, or your future children's phenotype, for non-disease purposes).
I went into that field and spent a couple decades learning how to do it. My only conclusion at the end was that it would only be considered societally acceptable for diseases, not recreation, for the foreseeable future, and even things that seem "easy" (like fixing retinitis pigmentosa) are in fact fractally challenging. As much as I would like to have chromatophore tattoos, we're just not in a place where we can justify this (even self-experimentation) because it's really hard to know if your intervention had the effect you desired, and no other effects.
I’m about your age, but holy hell, if I had been an admissions officer, that would have sold me on you.
I’m an anesthesiologist, though, so “likes to play god” sort of goes with the territory. It’s not common, but there are surgeries where you go on heart-lung bypass, chill the patient down to 30 C, and then stop the pumps. No blood flow. The surgeon does the critical part, you turn the pumps back on and warm them up, and then the body takes over again.
"My only conclusion at the end was that it would only be considered societally acceptable for diseases, not recreation"
I strongly doubt this. If technology is there, the path from disease to recreation would be very short once the market is involved. Except at the extremes, whether a condition is a "disease" or "impairment" can be pretty subjective.
I'm an anesthesiologist, which curiously enough is a lacuna in pretty much every religion that has opinions about medical treatment. Oh, it's not okay to take this drug or that one, but you're totally fine with being in a medically induced coma? Whatevs, bro.