First Cloned Human Embryo 355
Human cloning, or at least the production of human embryos, is no longer hypothetical; a company called Advanced Cell Technology claims to have successfully done just that. DivideX0 writes: "The Scientific American has this article. Note the research was conducted in the U.S. although there are bills pending in Washington that will ban this research." There's also a story at MSNBC. Update: 11/25 16:07 GMT by T : Here's ACT's press release as well.
Imagine the monsters that will come next (Score:3, Interesting)
Apparently they are getting better at it... (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Imagine the monsters that will come next (Score:2, Informative)
/* Steve */
Re:Imagine the monsters that will come next (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Imagine the monsters that will come next (Score:2)
Not very viable yet (Score:2)
Random side thought: I can just see the efforts to implement copy protection in the world of clones. The DMCA and the rest. And the ethical debates involved.
feh
Re:Imagine the monsters that will come next (Score:2)
Human testing is risky, but is absolutely necessary for the advancement of medical science.
Re:Imagine the monsters that will come next (Score:2, Funny)
Then how do you explain George W?
So this means that... (Score:2, Insightful)
Sad sad sad
Re:So this means that... (Score:2)
Well, maybe so, but I'm sure there's piles of other related things to patent about this, procedures, treatments, machines that go Bing!, etc.
Re:So this means that... (Score:1)
Re:So this means that... (Score:4, Funny)
Need Bad PR For Cloning (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Need Bad PR For Cloning (Score:1)
Jaysyn
Re:Need Bad PR For Cloning (Score:1)
No, that's great sci-fi fodder, but what I'm refering to is the human toll.
A man and woman (or either alone) want to have a child and are unable to naturally
They consult a specialist who does this sort of thing
They have egg cells, sperm, other cells taken
Either the woman or volunteer hosts the embryo
Failure by stillbirth, premature birth, defects, etc. happen.
Illustrate the emotional cost of dead or ill formed and living children
The chief problem as I still understand is that the practice of cloning is still crude, with high failure rates. And by failure I mean all outcomes other than healthy with ten fingers and toes and will live to be 75 and have average intelligence and lead a normal life. For animals it's been easy to push past the public, except for PETA and others sympathetic to animals.
Have a birth mortality rate of one in two and you'd think there's a major problem, since even the worst rate in the world is better than that. Then there's when the lawyers get involved...
I think a well done example of how Cloning could not work out would be a service. Too bad nobody does these kinds of films in Hollywood anymore. Maybe an independant, but try to get your local cinema or ABC, CBS, NBC, etc. network to carry it.
Re:Need Bad PR For Cloning (Score:2)
* A man and woman want to buy a car
* They consult a greasy salesman who sells it to them
* An accident by distraction, bad tires, mechanical failure, ice, etc. happens
* Illustrate the societal cost of dangerous machines.
The chief problem as I still understand is that automobile safety is still crude, with high accident rates. And by accident I mean all outcomes which result with dead, crippled, or maimed humans. It's been easy to push past the public, except for Ralph Nader and various environmental groups.
Have a driving mortality rate of one in a thousand and you'd think there's a major problem, since even the worst rate in the world of pedestrian traffic is better than that. Then there's when the lawyers get involved...
I think a well done example of how automobiles could not work out would be a service. Too bad nobody does these kinds of films in Hollywood anymore.
Re:Need Bad PR For Cloning (Score:2)
A man and woman (or either alone) want to have a child and are unable to naturally
They consult a specialist who does this sort of thing
They have egg cells, sperm, other cells taken
Either the woman or volunteer hosts the embryo
Failure by stillbirth, premature birth, defects, etc. happen.
Illustrate the emotional cost of dead or ill formed and living children
Did you plan to write that list so that it didn't mention cloning and could apply to nearly any assisted-fertilization effort by the parents? If not, maybe you should think about just what the fundamental difference is anyway.
And by failure I mean all outcomes other than healthy with ten fingers and toes and will live to be 75 and have average intelligence and lead a normal life.
So we should ban any kind of reproduction altogether, because entirely natural methods haven't even come close to hitting that target.
Re:Need Bad PR For Cloning (Score:1)
That's why you'll probably only hear about such things on 60 minutes or other topical news shows, rather than a balanced entertainment medium.
Re:The Outer Limits (Score:2)
Re:Need Bad PR For Cloning (Score:1)
Re:Need Bad PR For Cloning (Score:2, Informative)
They're not going to grow a living person from this. The aim is to use the cells after they've multiplied a bit and use them medically.
Whether that is better or worse than producing a person is up to you.
Re:Need Bad PR For Cloning (Score:1)
It's totally different (Score:2, Insightful)
It's not old. Stem Cell research in the past has involved embryos that were created in the old-fashioned egg-and-sperm-in-test-tube way. Generally in infertility clinics. That involves creating a "new" human life (or at least, a new combination of DNA that could become a unique human), then turning it into stem cells. The stem cells in question will then contain this DNA, which might cause the body to reject them if they're implanted into a recipient.
This technique involves creating a cloned cell, from an individual's own DNA. There's no conception, no unique DNA (essentially, the embryo is as unique a "life" as the cells in my big toe). And the stem cells derived from it can be implanted into the donor without the worry of rejection.
This is really the future of stem cell research. Bush's proposed solution is to prevent the use of existing (non-cloned, leftover from fertility research) embryos for stem cell research (instead the leftovers will be destroyed in an incinerator.)
Unfortunately, there's no Federal law on the creation of cloned embryos, and no real notion of whether a cloned embryo has special rights as a unique person-- it is after all, the donor's DNA, which has been activated and made to divide.
Re:Need Bad PR For Cloning (Score:1)
No functioning brain = not a person.
Thanks for clearing that up, now just tell me who adjudicated this and how they got appointed? There's no shortage of religious and non-religious stands as to when it's a person. Science and religion == oil and water.
Re:Need Bad PR For Cloning (Score:2)
Which would make me a genocidal monster far, far worse than Hitler, Pol Pot, and Sam Walton combined...
Re:Need Bad PR For Cloning (Score:3, Funny)
In May 2002, the world will finally see the dangers of cloning and the disasterous effects it could have on The Republic!!!
Re:Need Bad PR For Cloning (Score:5, Insightful)
What they are doing is human cell cloning, which is hardly unethical. This is on the same ethical level as commonplace tissue transplants. They are not making embryos, but simply cells that can then be used to patch up damaged tissue in aging or diseased adults.
I think this sounds like a great idea - and with further research will beat the pants off the barely successful Frankenstein-like system of transplanting tissue between humans that we use now. The person instead gets their own copied cells.
Please take the time to really think about what this mean before jumping to conclusions.
Re:Need Bad PR For Cloning (Score:2)
We've been doing it for years... (Score:4, Insightful)
Identical twins are the same person at birth who have different events in life that alter their personalities and responses to shape a new individual.
This doesn't frighten me at all. No 'soul' bullshit, because if there are souls, then it's a new one in the clone, not the same one. This has a lot of potential for good, and I don't know of much that doesn't have it for bad too. So let's all relax and think before we cry 'OH DEAR GOD SOMEBODY PLEASE THINK OF THE CHILDREN'.
Re:We've been doing it for years... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:We've been doing it for years... (Score:1, Funny)
this is seriously offtopic but it reminds me of a bbspot (i think) bit i saw about anthrax:
Q: Why are Americans likely targets for Anthrax attacks?
A: Anthrax is a disease found primarily in sheep and cattle. Americans share many similarities with sheep and cattle as they are easily herded and frighten quickly.
Re:Cloning Sheep (Score:1)
reproductive cloning, yes (Score:1, Insightful)
It sounds like what they're doing here is therapeutic cloning, which doesn't really equate with identical twins. When you have identical twins, you don't harvest cells from one of them for the other. In this way, what they've done truly is new.
Re:We've been doing it for years... (Score:1)
There's something screwy about this whole thing, though. Scientific American isn't really a peer-reviewed journal, and the journal they claim to have published in (e-biomed: The Journal of Regenerative Medicine) sounds pretty iffy as well.
Re:We've been doing it for years... (Score:2)
It is a political stance and people always have their sides.
I say that it is a great thing for the world. Just b/c someone is cloned (as the root author said) does not mean that we are going to have 1 million little Hitlers running around.
Genetic research is already going on to make the perfect children. No birth defects, whatever eye color you want, whatever. I don't see how this is very different.
For the countries of the world that could support this kind of research I don't really see any "mad scientist" type creating an army of super-humans (as is the general public fear it seems). China still hasn't had a manned space launch and they were quite a ways behind in the nuclear arms race. Russia only had the bomb built b/c they borrowed much of the information from their allies.
I say let it go on. There is nothing but good to come from this. Stem cell research as well.
Re:We've been doing it for years... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:We've been doing it for years... (Score:1)
Re:We've been doing it for years... (Score:1)
Heck, your argument is the same kind of argument that says, "Why develop the integrated circuit, when I have a slide rule?". Can you SEE how the argument you are using has NO BEARING on the issue you are arguing against? Why advance science when people lived just fine in the stone age?
Slashdot would be much nicer if people would please please please please please use their minds just every once in a while.
Re:We've been doing it for years... (Score:5, Insightful)
There are millions of ways of advancing science. I'm arguing that there are better areas to focus our engergies - studies that will actually further society. I'm arguing that in this area not only would we "not benefit" from this, but that it would "add problems" because of the reasons I mentioned earlier. Just because we CAN doesn't mean we SHOULD. Your "forest" analogy has nothing to do with my statements. Humanity is more important then Science - period. Our decisions MUST be human centered, not "geekocentric".
"Why develop the integrated circuit, when I have a slide rule?".
You should review your debate tactics. It is intellectually dishonest to take an argument against a particular scientific advancement and generalize it as an argument against any scientific advancement. It is ludicrous to assume that I, a Computer Scientist, want to hinder scientific advancement.
Please focus on my core contention. I'm not necessarily against cloning specific cells or the research behind it. I'm against cloning humans as a species. It's called Responsible Science(tm).
Re:We've been doing it for years... (Score:2)
I am strongly in favor of furthering society as well - as are most people. But I think it is a fallacy to assume that the research being described in the article is somehow taking away from our resources for social research and improvement.
These people are specialists in biology and medicine. They are trying to find cures for disease and the maladies of aging. I think this is noble research.
I don't understand how cloning got such a bad rap. This research is for cloning individual cells - which is mirrored naturally every time a cell divides. This is how our body repairs itself. These scientists are trying to give us the ability to help heal things that our body wouldn't naturally be able to heal.
Imagine if you had liver disease and needed a replacement. Would you rather some other person's semi-compatible liver cells were removed from their dead body to be put into you or that some of your own cells were grown in a petri dish and then put back. Well the first is commonplace, the second is about to become illegal. I find this disturbing.
Peace
Re:We've been doing it for years... (Score:2)
We're talking about therapeutic cloning here, not reproductive cloning. No humans will be made from this embryo. But let's face it-- preventing this research won't do a damn thing to stop reproductive cloning. There are a ton of great reasons for therapeutic cloning, all of which have enormous benefits to society. On a purely objective level, you have to balance those potential benefits against the primary objections: the "destruction of embryos is wrong" argument, and the "this is a slippery slope to reproductive human cloning a la A Brave New World" concerns.
The objection to the destruction of human embryos is an understandable reaction, but it's debatable at best. Clearly, embryos don't suffer in any way that we recognize-- they have no nervous system. Destroying a cloned embryo doesn't even destroy a unique combination of DNA-- it simply destroys one special cell out of a billion non-unique cells in the donor's body. A cloned embryo certainly has the ability to become a person, but then so does every cell in my body if I insert it into an egg cell. Does trimming my toenails equate to the destruction of millions of potential lives? Meanwhile, thousands of conventionally fertilized, "unique" embryos are incinerated every day by fertility clinics, but this destruction goes unmentioned (because, presumably, babymaking advances society.)
The slippery slope argument has us believe that creating a cloned embryo sets us on an unavoidable path to human cloning, and all sorts of horrors beyond. Therefore we must blanket-outlaw all cloning of human beings, regardless of the consequences. This assumes three things, of course:
One: cloned human babies can't be created if Congress bans all cloning research, including therapeutic cloning.
Two: if reproductive cloning does come to pass, it will somehow lead to monsters or second-class human beings
Three, that a cloned human is in some way "less" than a non-clone.
Reproductive cloning can't happen if we ban therapeutic cloning. This is ridiculous, of course. The cat is way out of the bag, and has been since Dolly. When ACT cloned this embryo, they stipulated that it wouldn't be implanted in a womb. Somebody less "scrupulous"-- perhaps outside of the reach of our laws-- could easily replicate ACT's work, and proceed with implantation. Outlawing continued work on therapeutic cloning now isn't going to make that possibility any less real. If you really feel that cloned human beings are dangerous, then make it illegal to implant them into the womb-- don't screw us all by outlawing therapeutic cloning.
If reproductive cloning does come to pass, it will somehow lead to monsters or second-class human beings. It would seem to me that allowing some non-reproductive cloning research actually reduces the chance of some horrible reproductive-cloning accident. We probably should outlaw reproductive cloning, given the potential birth defects we already see in animals. But if somebody somewhere's going to try it despite such laws, outlawing therapeutic cloning is only going to make their attempt less well-guided, and more likely to end in disaster. As to the "second-class" citizens worry... Well, as far as I know we outlawed slavery and indentured servitude years ago. If we're so unethical as to create (expensive) cloned human beings just to enslave them or raid them for organs, then there'd be nothing to stop us from doing it to non-clones. I can only hope that we're better than that, or there's little hope for us.
A cloned human is in some way "less" than a non-clone. A lot of the fear comes from the religious belief that life (and therefore the soul) arrive at the moment of conception. Given that there are millions of indentical twin "clones" walking around, thinking for themselves, and otherwise having souls, this belief seems somewhat questionable (yet is rarely brought up.) However, if the religious argument is left out, the main fear seems to be that we will allow the creation of clones with limited rights (see above.)
There's also some rather silly fear that cloning will take over from "conventional" reproduction and destroy the American Way of Life (tm), or that people will unethically begin to clone my DNA without my permission. Again, if the law is the only thing protecting us from such things, then let's write laws that specifically protect us from those possibilites, rather than throwing the baby out with the bathwater.
So to get back to your point, I must question your whole premise that this sort of therepeutic cloning won't "further society". I doubt that you could find a single area of research that has more potential to "further society" than this one-- that is, cure disease, increase quality of living, create new resources as yet unimagined.
In fact, if "furthering society" is primary goal, I would imagine that billions of research dollars would be redirected into this area. Why are we spending millions developing acne medications when instead we could be developing a technology with the potential to repair spinal cord damage and repair damaged heart tissue?
Yes, there's some possibility that it could lead to reproductive cloning, and if that's not a useful area of research than I imagine we won't pursue it too far. And of course there are going to be those who object to any sort of cloning, but there are millions of lives that could be saved and improved by this technology. I find it hard to believe that we should hold those people hostage just because some people selectively object to certain aspects of the research.
Re:We've been doing it for years... (Score:2)
Apparently very few people chose to read any of the linked articles, evidenced by Chicken Little here crying about the more pressing problems of the modern age. I'll agree with you that couples attempting to have a child by cloning is "silly", but the need to reproduce is a biological imperative hard-wired into our brains. As a species, our reproductive priorities probably fall in the loose order of:
immaculate(God)
natural(you and me baby)
invitro(you, me OR someone else, and a test tube)
cloning(me, possibly you or someone else - but not neccesarily, and a test tube)
adoption(maybe you, maybe me, maybe neither of us)
Folks, the article is about therapeutic cloning, not reproductive cloning. You can get off your soapboxes and stop warning us about the End of Man. Read the Scientific American [scientificamerican.com] article before you start clucking, OK?
In a nutshell, for those of you who are too mired in ignorance/sensationalism:
At our current stage of tech, a mature female egg can be stripped of it's nucleus, and a donor cell (skin in this case) is implanted itno the egg. This "embryo/zygote" is then encouraged to divide. Alternatively, they managed to get a mature female egg to divide without the introductionof any foreign material at all. (Guys, we are no longer needed
The point behind all this was not to implant these embryos into a uterus and bring to term. The point is to supply stem cells, for therapy of autoimmune diseases and spinal injuries.
My spine cells, used to create more of my spine cells, to be re-introduced into my damaged spine, to grow an undamaged spine.
I don't see an army of cloned soldiers or designer babies here. Now move along.
Re:We've been doing it for years... (Score:4, Interesting)
Actually, the birth rate in the U.S. and in much of the 'first world' is below replacement level (and in some places, is precipitously low -- Italy for one).
Population increases will continue for a couple of decades due to inertia, imigration, and lengthening lifespan, but if the trends continue, the population will decline.
Of course, this isn't all rosy news, as it means a world with many old people and few children -- in some countries the median age may well approach 60!
That's not the question (Score:2)
That's what it boils down to. The problem isn't in having a couple of identical humans running around, the ethical problem is should human beings artificially engineer human beings.
Don't start with your "potential for good" bullshit. We've seen that literally hundreds of times. This time, the point at stake is so crucial for human ethics that we should actually take the time to bother tho think of the ethical consequences beforehand.
Re:That's not the question (Score:4, Insightful)
You know, we have been artificially generating human beings since human life began on this planet. And the "potential for harm" is tremendous. Just think of this, every criminal that ever lived was created by an action of two other human beings, that is, by definition, an "artificial" creation.
Interestingly, not a single one of those criminals has ever been produced in a lab. So, the ethical problem is not "where and how will we create new human beings", the TRUE ethical question we must face is "how do we raise the human beings we create".
Re:We've been doing it for years... (Score:1)
Congress passes a law that makes it illegal to clone a human that doesn't give consent to be cloned. That way, if you are against being cloned, you can't be cloned. If, on the other hand, you'd like to be cloned then you can. It seems pretty simple to me. Everybody wins.
Re:We've been doing it for years... (Score:2)
Can you tell me any biological difference between clones and twins?
Twins are produced naturally at the same time. Clones are produced from cells not intended for reproduction, and there are unknown consequences to this. It's entirely possible that a human produced through cloning will have severe developmental problems, even beyond simple genetic errors.
That is my argument against cloning -- that we simply don't know enough at this point to say that it's safe. It's hugely irresponsible to produce damaged children through these early experiments.
Once we know a lot more, I would personally have no problem with cloning.
Re:We've been doing it for years... (Score:2)
Nobody's suggesting that imperfect cloning run rampant, creating individuals with a flawed method.
That's the problem... that's exactly what they are suggesting. They are pushing ahead with human cloning when we don't even fully understand the effects of animal cloning.
I agree -- all technologies have problems in the beginning. That's why we do animal studies on drugs before we jump into human studies. There are way too many scientists who are trying to make a name for themselves by skipping that first step.
Re:We've been doing it for years... (Score:2)
Reuters has a bit less sensational headline: U.S. Company Says It Cloned Human Embryo for Cells [yahoo.com]
A U.S. company said on Sunday it had cloned a human embryo in a breakthrough aimed not at creating a human being but at mining the embryo for stem cells used to treat disease.
Advanced Cell Technology said it had used cloning technology to grow a tiny ball of cells that could then be used as a source of stem cells. Embryonic stem cells are a kind of master cell that can grow into any kind of cell in the body.
I think the headline 'First Cloned Human Embryo' is slightly misleading. If one were to read only that, one might draw the conclusion that they were making a human 'Dolly'. A more accurate, if less attention-grabbing tagline might be 'Scientists produce cloned embryonic cells'.
Doesn't have quite the same ring, though.
technical differences between clones and twins (Score:4, Interesting)
2. genetic imprinting. Fertilized zygotes have DNA contributions from two parents, whilst cloned embryos only from one parent. DNA is often covalently modified (e.g., methylation) in a process called imprinting, where the modified allele is silenced. Modifying these silenced alleles often has deleterious consequences.
3. Telomere length. Chromosomal ends are maintained by special DNA structures called telomeres. The lengths of telomeres are often different between different cell types, and usually reflects the state of differentiation of the cells. Telomeres are known to affect life span and this is probably one of the main reasons why cloned animals have poor life spans.
There are just some factors that I can think of off-hand, I'm sure there are many others. Just because organisms have identical DNA sequences do not mean that they will develop identically, even if you do not take environmental effects into consideration.
Don't get me wrong, I am all for cloning and stem cell research, but it is prudent to think through ethical concerns before plunging ahead.
Old Data (Score:2)
1. Children created through IVF turn out plenty normal. You're confusing embryos *created* in vivo with those *brought to term* in vivo. There's still no substitute for a human womb---these artificial embryos would need to be implanted into a regular ol' uterus to become children.
2. You have genes from both of your parents. The genome in the embryo is the same as the genome you had *as* an embryo. The only difference is, the first step---that of recombination---has already been done.
3. Wasn't the telomere question still up in the air? I thought most clones animals had normal lifespans, and it wasn't even shown conclusively that Dolly was aging prematurely.
Please try to keep up-to-date. These questions were all answered months ago.
-grendel drago
Wrong... (Score:1)
As for the gene defects, how are we supposed to fix it without studying it? Performing this stuff is unethical on humans, but is it really any more ethical to do it on animals?
Re:Wrong... (Score:1)
Grow up. We hold our fate in our own hands. At some point or other we'll have to start controlling our own genetic evolution -- just like we're doing with the cultural evolution right now.
Re:Identical twins. (Score:1)
Not in the case of identical twins. One sperm, one egg. The embryo splits in two at a later stage. Identical twins have the same DNA.
Re:Identical twins. (Score:1)
I see it like this. Just because a child might not live as long he still has the right to live and therefore still has the right to be born.
If there is someone willing to adopt a cloned child. WHy not?
People have this misconception that the child is going to be a freak which just isn't the case, its a normal human child just concieved differently.
First Human Clone a No-Show Despite Predictions (Score:1)
Watching "Meet the Press" right now (Score:5, Insightful)
Unfortunately it looks like the debate in the US senate is going to be very one sided, and the senate will vote like the house did and pass a bill banning cloning research in broad strokes...including the research that was just announced, which is not meant to clone entire human beings, but an effort to conduct stem cell research to produce transplantable organs by taking dna from a patient and cloning compatible organ cells, to reduce the risk of rejection.
The long term plan for this company is to be able to use a synthetic process and skip the reproductive cells altogether, but to get there there needs to be intense research on how the stem cell process works, so that a organ specific process can be developed, which doesn't run the ethical risk of creating a whole person if some cells were quickly stolen from the lab and placed in a womb.
I find it somewhat ironic that so much research goes on with materials that have the potential to kill large amounts of human life...but research with the potential to create human life is so strongly opposed.
-jef
Re:Watching "Meet the Press" right now (Score:1)
People are worried what this will bring us in the future.
Neatly tucked away in a separate article was a discussion on the ethics of cloning humans, particularly cloning humans for research purposes. I found this paragraph disturbing. Here, they try to explain the rectitude of seeking "human eggs for scientific research". Their response was disturbing:
"First, a substantial market in human eggs for reproductive purposes already exists. Young women are being paid substantial sums to provide eggs that can help single women or couples have children. If women can undergo risks for this purpose, we asked, why should they not be allowed to undertake the same risks to further medical research that could save human lives? And if they can be paid for the time and discomfort that egg donation for reproductive purposes involves, why can't they receive reasonable payment for ovulation induction for research purposes?"
In just the paragraph before, they were rebutting a "slippery slope" argument. Meaning, we'll do one thing, become desensitized to it, and then we'll move on again. Before you know it, we'll be cloning humans for all sorts of unethical reasons, the argument goes.
In that paragraph, the clearly are following that slope -- who said that selling eggs is ethical? These women are mostly poor, and some of them go through quite a bit of pain so some rich couple can buy their egg. Is this ethical? Furthermore, is it a basis for a rational?
I fear were this will all lead us.
Re:Watching "Meet the Press" right now (Score:2)
Once again, thank you, Religions of the Book.
Re:Watching "Meet the Press" right now (Score:2)
Religion is so convenient when it's in your favor, and a burden when you are killed because you don't agree with it. The ironic thing, before I read this I just had a long talk about genetic duplication/cloning (in the sense of breeding two genetically identical people in a hypothetical situation).
I don't regularly vote becuase seldom do I get to vote on issues I care about, like this. This will never hit the ballots, neither will a lot of anti-terrorism laws. The problem with a republic is the representatives are not the voice of the majority, just a less-evil choice. You get a bible thumping ex-reverend senator who doesn't understand that if his God didn't want us to create ourselves than he wouldn't have given us a mind to do it.
Don't blame the scientist, blame God.
Re:Watching "Meet the Press" right now (Score:2)
These "moral and ethical" Christians are also wondering right now whether a child that isn't created "naturally" by God even has a soul.
Given that human cloning will take place somewhere, probably sooner rather than later, the implication is of course that it'd be fine to butcher these babies old-testament-style, since they aren't really human and are an affront to God.
Re:Watching "Meet the Press" right now (Score:2)
No sir, your opinion is that an embryonic cluster constitutes a human life. And your opinion is not universally shared.
If you define "human life" in terms of sentience, you come to the conclusion that it doesn't matter that harvesting body parts from live humans is a Bad Thing (harvesting from dead humans is fine, so long as the human dies "naturally" or as a result of an expressed wish to die so that its organs may be harvested).
Why? Because if you define humanity by sentience, you realize you're not doing a Bad Thing if you chop up the blastocyst early enough, or learn how to differentiate the cells by yourself so that you can grow, say, only the desired organ.
(Yes, I would deny "human" status to the unfortunate gobs of flesh born without brains, e.g. acephalitic fetuses whose mothers brought them to term, etc... and I might very well be persuaded to argue for rights for chimpanzees and gorillas, as they appear to exhibit sentience on the order of a 3-year-old homo sapiens, which puts them head-and-shoulders above our current crop of technophobic landsharks and Congresscritters, to say the least.)
If you're going to argue that a pancreas or liver is sentient, by all means, go ahead. But you'll have to arrest the Type-I diabetics for manslaughter (their immune systems destroyed their pancreas' insulin-producing cells during childhood), and alcoholics for reckless endangerment (that is, due to cirrhosis.)
I can see it all now - armies of fetus freaks turning their anger on a new evil, and fighting for Organ Rights Now. *sigh*
Not ready yet. (Score:1)
Re:Not ready yet. (Score:1)
At the moment the real problems are ethical, not scientific. Researchers are not cloning humans to make babies, they're doing it to use the embryonic cells.
One side sees this as a way of advancing medical knowledge. The cells are just cells.
The other side sees it as killing. The cells are already a person.
Body farms (Score:1)
Re:Body farms (Score:2)
They intend to make stem cell lines, which is a far throw from making another human for harvesting. Stems cells can generate nerve or heart or bone tissue, but that's not the same as growing a person with a working brain, heart, or skeleton. A small collection of undifferentiated cells is a long distance from having full body floating in a tank.
Re:Body farms (Score:1)
Re:Body farms (Score:4, Insightful)
Apart from all the technical details, the cloning process is somthing like: take an egg, replace DNA with DNA of choice, grow the embryo, split the embryo, proceed using mother nature's own processes. From a religious point of view this is not even supposed to be possible but the end result is kind of hard to deny (challenging the assumptions that underly some religions). However, most relegions rely on ignorance anyway so I doubt that this development will affect them in anyway.
In any case, when my liver/kidney/heart/whatever fails I would be very pleased if a backup part, constructed from my own cells, would be available rather than having to rely on third party provided parts. Everyday lots of people die because there are no donor organs available. And even if there is a donor organ it is uncertain whether the transplantation will succeed. This technology could be a great contribution to a solution to this problem.
Re:Body farms (Score:2)
The trouble is defining when an embryo becomes human life. From a scientific point of view this is a non debate since life is not a scientific term. You could differentiate between organic and non organic matter, perhaps even distinguish between things that contain DNA or don't contain DNA. Or even go as far as defining life as a cell. However is a computer simulated cell life (impossible, I know, but hyphotetically?)? What about aritificial intelligence?
Consequently, you have hardline religious people taking the extreme point of view that any embryo of any size is human life and should be protected. Whereas scientists will point out that especially in the early stage embryo's have very little characteristics that you could call human. It has no brain (hence no conscience), no internal organs, no way of sensing the world. It is just a blob of cells with no personality, will or anything else worth protecting.
I tend to position myself on the scientific side and consider stepping on a bug a greater crime than killing an embryo since unlike the embryo the bug has a little brain, perhaps even a personality and is definately interacting with its world in some meaningful way.
I'm against legislation against cloning because I am in favour of separation of state and church. Any legislation would be based on non scientific (most likely religious) arguments and hence interfere with this highly valued principle. Any legislation would interfere with scientific research. The earth is not flat, we can go to the moon and we will be able to clone humans. That's fine with me.
Stem cell work more interesting (Score:1)
This issue is hot. I think the government will continue to get more and more pressure to allow stem-cell research to go forward (with new, uh, material) based on successes like this.
I'm having trouble making up my mind on stem-cell research.
Needs to be Done (Score:1)
Re:Needs to be Done (Score:1, Offtopic)
Don't ban the research. (Score:4, Interesting)
Why should research be banned that could allow you to "grow" a new heart (or liver or whatever) if yours breaks somewhere down the line? If this research ONLY allowed people to get heart transplants without waiting on infinitely long waiting lists for someone to die, imagine the benefit to medicine.
If the U.S. bans this research, it will simply move to other countries. Imagine having to live in China or Russia for a while to get your heart transplant because saving your life this way in the U.S. is illegal.
In my opinion, the U.S. should ban cloning an entire human for whatever purpose, as this could be used for some very evil things. But banning research is stupid.
Therapeutic vs. reproductive cloning (Score:5, Interesting)
As for the posts which talk about the weaker DNA and shortened life of clones, RTFA! There's a difference between cloned embyonic cells and cloned adult cells. But try explaining that to Slashdot. Much cleverer to say "Three thumbs up for cloning!" or the like and move on to other matters.
Why treat this differently from normal parenthood? (Score:2)
And so could normal child-rearing.
If you clone a human and bring the cloned baby to term, you have... a human baby, like any other.
Why not sidestep most of the debate arguments, and just rewrite parenthood laws to define parents as people who directly caused a child to come into existence? This will cover cloning and any other technologies that come up that could cause humans to be born in any but the old-fashioned way. It would declare clones human ("duh"), and would ensure that responsibility for these humans would be placed somewhere.
This doesn't even have to touch the abortion issue (the question of where in the line between zygote and baby a child becomes a human under the law). That can be left for the courts to fight out.
One law for me, another for thee... (Score:2)
I'd like to see either a total ban or a complete lack of restriction. The hypocritical prunes in public office don't deserve to extend their lives beyond the public they ostensibly serve, not a single one. Except maybe Tom Campbell, but he's not in public office anymore and certainly isn't hypocritical.
Are you red-baiting? The only things wrong with Russia is that it's cold and has gangs. It's indistinguishable from Chicago except the media hegemony doesn't control what software you can write.-jhp
Sorry, had to do it (Score:1)
We better watch out... (Score:1)
Cloning humans is THE solution... (Score:1)
"How Close Are We To Cloning Time?" by Frank Miele (Score:3, Insightful)
It's a shame Michael Shermer's article on ethics isn't online. Shermer finds most objections to cloning to be variations on "that's God's provenance and we shouldn't go there" which he finds absurd. "If God meant us to fly, we'd have wings" and such. Very thought-provoking, whether you agree with him or not.
If you find cloning interesting, I recommend getting the back issue [skeptic.com].
In light of this announcement... (Score:1)
Ben
This is not reproductive cloning (Score:5, Informative)
According to the Scientific American article (which you should read now), the company, Advanced Cell Technology [advancedcell.com], is not pursuing research on reproductive cloning. What they are pursuing is research on therapeutic cloning. Without going into details (go read the article), what this will eventually allow researchers to do is grow organs, tissues, etc. from the intended receipient's own stem cells. The stem cells are created using cloning. If this becomes reality, the benefits will be huge. It's called "regenerative medicine" (quoting their CEO) for a reason.
Reproductive cloning is more difficult. While the first stage is the same - insert new DNA into egg, prompt the start of division - reproductive cloning has many more steps required to create a baby. First of all, as far as I know, babies can't be grown in vitro, so you have to implant the cloned egg into a mother. There is massive potential for danger here, not only to the growing embryo but also to the mother. Furthermore, there are issues that have yet to be resolved, such as the possibility that cloned DNA is already "aged," leading to shorter life for the cloned person or animal. Neither of these absolutely critical issues is even touched by this research. Reproductive cloning is a long, long way off.
On the other hand, it appears therapeutic cloning is making much progress. I for one am excited by the possibilites, and I think that any legislative reaction to this research is purely reactive and would ignore the facts. I see no ethical problems with this research whatsoever, and neither did the ethical board overseeing this research.
-SymphonicMan
Read this essay by Gregory Benford (Score:3, Interesting)
"SELFNESS" [reason.com] by Gregory Benford
Read the paper, not the SciAm story (Score:4, Informative)
Clones die (Score:2)
This is fairly typical for any cloning experiment. Frankly, six cells aren't a whole lot, and going from a six-celled embryo to a 100-celled one that can actually produce stem cells is no easy feat. It'll still be quite a long time before this can be used at all.
Clones made in labs always seem to die early. The trick doesn't seem to be so much how to make them, but how to keep them alive.
Plus, we don't know that organs grown from cloned stem-cells wouldn't have a shorter lifetime than regular ones, as clones tend to do - keep in mind that Dolly the sheep died very young.
SciAm is slashdotted... (Score:2)
What this isn't. (Score:2)
What this is about is simply cloning a human embryonic stem cell, so that it can be used to grow human organs. Not human beings. That is all that anyone is trying to do. No one is attempting to use human beings are organ containers.
What I really want to see is if they used DNA from an adult human or another embryo. I have heard that the biggest hurdle is going to be using adult DNA so this could or could not be the holy grail...
Now this is really going too far (Score:2, Funny)
I mean, Lucas using KFC and Pepsi is one thing. Cloning embryos is another.
J. Morgan
To dispell many of the myths (Score:2, Interesting)
parts (Score:2)
But really, I think this is great, and I pity the legislators that can't tell the difference between bad (sometimes TERRIBLE) Hollywood visions of horror and evil, and real-life scientific purposes and benefits. I guess that happens to people raised in an environment of blind, unquestioning religious faith, trained to believe in fairy tails and some sca-a-a-ary man in the clouds that loves you but makes it hard not to get sent to some land pain and (literally) hellfire. I just find most near-sighted, child-like religions have 'moralities' that are anything but moral.
Re:parts (Score:2)
*sigh*
Re:parts (Score:2)
(The following is extracted from George Carlin's recent HBO special, "You Are All Diseased", recorded live at New York City's Beacon Theater on February 6, 1999)
In the Bullshit Department, a businessman can't hold a candle to a clergyman. 'Cause I gotta tell you the truth, folks. When it comes to bullshit, big-time, major league bullshit, you have to stand in awe of the all-time champion of false promises and exaggerated claims, religion. No contest. No contest. Religion. Religion easily has the greatest bullshit story ever told. Think about it. Religion has actually convinced people that there's an invisible man living in the sky who watches everything you do, every minute of every day. And the invisible man has a special list of ten things he does not want you to do. And if you do any of these ten things, he has a special place, full of fire and smoke and burning and torture and anguish, where he will send you to live and suffer and burn and choke and scream and cry forever and ever 'til the end of time!
But He loves you. He loves you, and He needs money! He always needs money! He's all-powerful, all-perfect, all-knowing, and all-wise, somehow just can't handle money! Religion takes in billions of dollars, they pay no taxes, and they always need a little more. Now, you talk about a good bullshit story. Holy Shit!
But I want you to know something, this is sincere, I want you to know, when it comes to believing in God, I really tried. I really, really tried. I tried to believe that there is a God, who created each of us in His own image and likeness, loves us very much, and keeps a close eye on things. I really tried to believe that, but I gotta tell you, the longer you live, the more you look around, the more you realize, something is fucked up.
Something is wrong here. War, disease, death, destruction, hunger, filth, poverty, torture, crime, corruption, and the Ice Capades. Something is definitely wrong. This is not good work. If this is the best God can do, I am not impressed. Results like these do not belong on the resume of a Supreme Being. This is the kind of shit you'd expect from an office temp with a bad attitude. And just between you and me, in any decently-run universe, this guy would've been out on his all-powerful ass a long time ago. And by the way, I say "this guy", because I firmly believe, looking at these results, that if there is a God, it has to be a man.
No woman could or would ever fuck things up like this. So, if there is a God, I think most reasonable people might agree that he's at least incompetent, and maybe, just maybe, doesn't give a shit. Doesn't give a shit, which I admire in a person, and which would explain a lot of these bad results.
So rather than be just another mindless religious robot, mindlessly and aimlessly and blindly believing that all of this is in the hands of some spooky incompetent father figure who doesn't give a shit, I decided to look around for something else to worship. Something I could really count on.
And immediately, I thought of the sun. Happened like that. Overnight I became a sun-worshipper. Well, not overnight, you can't see the sun at night. But first thing the next morning, I became a sun-worshipper. Several reasons. First of all, I can see the sun, okay? Unlike some other gods I could mention, I can actually see the sun. I'm big on that. If I can see something, I don't know, it kind of helps the credibility along, you know? So everyday I can see the sun, as it gives me everything I need; heat, light, food, flowers in the park, reflections on the lake, an occasional skin cancer, but hey. At least there are no crucifixions, and we're not setting people on fire simply because they don't agree with us.
Sun worship is fairly simple. There's no mystery, no miracles, no pageantry, no one asks for money, there are no songs to learn, and we don't have a special building where we all gather once a week to compare clothing. And the best thing about the sun, it never tells me I'm unworthy. Doesn't tell me I'm a bad person who needs to be saved. Hasn't said an unkind word. Treats me fine. So, I worship the sun. But, I don't pray to the sun. Know why? I wouldn't presume on our friendship. It's not polite.
I've often thought people treat God rather rudely, don't you? Asking trillions and trillions of prayers every day. Asking and pleading and begging for favors. Do this, gimme that, I need a new car, I want a better job. And most of this praying takes place on Sunday His day off. It's not nice. And it's no way to treat a friend.
But people do pray, and they pray for a lot of different things, you know, your sister needs an operation on her crotch, your brother was arrested for defecating in a mall. But most of all, you'd really like to fuck that hot little redhead down at the convenience store. You know, the one with the eyepatch and the clubfoot? Can you pray for that? I think you'd have to. And I say, fine. Pray for anything you want. Pray for anything, but what about the Divine Plan?
Remember that? The Divine Plan. Long time ago, God made a Divine Plan. Gave it a lot of thought, decided it was a good plan, put it into practice. And for billions and billions of years, the Divine Plan has been doing just fine. Now, you come along, and pray for something. Well suppose the thing you want isn't in God's Divine Plan? What do you want Him to do? Change His plan? Just for you? Doesn't it seem a little arrogant? It's a Divine Plan. What's the use of being God if every run-down shmuck with a two-dollar prayerbook can come along and fuck up Your Plan?
And here's something else, another problem you might have: Suppose your prayers aren't answered. What do you say? "Well, it's God's will." "Thy Will Be Done." Fine, but if it's God's will, and He's going to do what He wants to anyway, why the fuck bother praying in the first place? Seems like a big waste of time to me! Couldn't you just skip the praying part and go right to His Will? It's all very confusing.
So to get around a lot of this, I decided to worship the sun. But, as I said, I don't pray to the sun. You know who I pray to? Joe Pesci. Two reasons: First of all, I think he's a good actor, okay? To me, that counts. Second, he looks like a guy who can get things done. Joe Pesci doesn't fuck around. In fact, Joe Pesci came through on a couple of things that God was having trouble with.
For years I asked God to do something about my noisy neighbor with the barking dog, Joe Pesci straightened that cocksucker out with one visit. It's amazing what you can accomplish with a simple baseball bat.
So I've been praying to Joe for about a year now. And I noticed something. I noticed that all the prayers I used to offer to God, and all the prayers I now offer to Joe Pesci, are being answered at about the same 50% rate. Half the time I get what I want, half the time I don't. Same as God, 50-50. Same as the four-leaf clover and the horseshoe, the wishing well and the rabbit's foot, same as the Mojo Man, same as the Voodoo Lady who tells you your fortune by squeezing the goat's testicles, it's all the same: 50-50. So just pick your superstition, sit back, make a wish, and enjoy yourself.
And for those of you who look to The Bible for moral lessons and literary qualities, I might suggest a couple of other stories for you. You might want to look at the Three Little Pigs, that's a good one. Has a nice happy ending, I'm sure you'll like that. Then there's Little Red Riding Hood, although it does have that X-rated part where the Big Bad Wolf actually eats the grandmother. Which I didn't care for, by the way.
And finally, I've always drawn a great deal of moral comfort from Humpty Dumpty. The part I like the best? "All the king's horses and all the king's men couldn't put Humpty Dumpty back together again." That's because there is no Humpty Dumpty, and there is no God. None, not one, no God, never was. In fact, I'm gonna put it this way. If there is a God, may he strike this audience dead! See? Nothing happened. Nothing happened? Everybody's okay? All right, tell you what, I'll raise the stakes a little bit. If there is a God, may he strike me dead. See? Nothing happened, oh, wait, I've got a little cramp in my leg. And my balls hurt. Plus, I'm blind. I'm blind, oh, now I'm okay again, must have been Joe Pesci, huh? God Bless Joe Pesci.
Thank you all very much.
Joe Bless You!
Think outside the box (Score:2, Insightful)
It seems to me that those who are in favor of this stem-cell research and so forth should really take a look at the long term effects of what could happen. Not necessarily a zombie race or something, but what major changes in our society will result from these new scientific/medical methods. Now I don't think it's unsafe to say that an embryonic stem cell is going to do you any harm, but furthering research in this area will certainly advance research in other related fields, and it's asinine for anyone to deny that human cloning will not be furthered by further research into stem cells.
We know exactly what will happen, the scientists in a few years will run out of things to research in stem cells, and focus energy on the challenge of cloning humans and things.
One must recognize the linkage between these objects, and notice that any changes in one will most certainly effect change in the other. Furthermore, we must scrutinize any new work that we do that involves these issues since they have the ability to vastly change the future, and we must decide if it is for better or for worse. I also don't think that we can ignore the feelings of religious groups or incite bigotry as a few others have, since as fellow humans, their beliefs are just as valid as ours, and it is their world, too. Certainly there are questiosn that a religion can answer only with faith, but there are just as many that one might pose to an unbeliever and yet he could not answer them at all.
are we headed for the Dark Age of Genetics? (Score:2)
Dr Wendy Smith
SeaQuest DSV
Is it scientists playing God that's so dangerous? or why they are playing God in the first place?
Sparkling cider is for chimps (Score:3, Interesting)
What cloning won't do:
1. Allow you to make a clone of someone and replace them in society with an exact replica. A clone of me made tomorrow would still take a normal amount of time to grow up and may or may not be anything like me. Genetically we'd be identical but unless he traveled back in time to live my life for me he probably wouldn't end up anything like me.
2. Allow me to create an army of super clone warriors to take over the world. Said soldiers would have to be gestated and raised like a normal army of soldiers.
What cloning embryos WOULD allow:
1. Do gene mapping and stem cell research with a very large subject base with little genetic discrepency. Every wonder why fruit flies and a few simple plants have been used for the past whatever years for biological experimentation? There's little genetic diversity and they're plentiful.
2. Figure out how to regenerate cells by cloning them so you can repair almost any part of the body damaged by just about anything. There's not a whole lot of a chance for rejection when you're your own oragan donor.
Cloning research doesn't require an embryo to be gestated. Then of course there are those holding to the notion that life begins as an embryo and all that jazz. That is just picking at straws because you don't have enough understanding of the process to make a logical argument against it. If you want to save a baby stop jacking off and ovulating but don't harrass somebody trying to make you and your kids have a better life.
Thoughts on reproductive cloning (Score:2)
But what I vehemently oppose is producing 50 or 100 deformed babies for every healthy clone, or even for the first healthy clone.
Before it is proper to even consider any arguments about why a particular cloning should be done, those doing the clones must:
1) Demonstrate that they can clone orangutangs with a rate of birth defects comparable to natural births, and show that those orangutangs live out a normal life span without significantly more health problems than normally produced orangutangs.
2) Having done this, demonstrate that they can take their results with organgutangs and, on the first attempt, achieve the same results with chimpanzees and gorillas.
Then, and only then, is it appropriate to attempt reproductive cloning of human beings.
Re:Stem cells for all! (Score:2, Informative)
Cloning is one way to make stem cells for other research.
The Scientific American story says what they did
The next step [after getting permission from the ethics committee] was to recruit women willing to contribute eggs to be used in the cloning procedure and also collect cells from individuals to be cloned (the donors)
This is the same technique used to make Dolly the sheep
Re:There really needs to be some kind of hold .. (Score:1)
That's the only way we can learn about the dangers involved.
If human cloning is driven underground by fearful luddite governments for "moral and ethical consideration" (and please keep religions out of this; this is an entirely secular matter), only the military, top criminals and other shadowy organizations will experiment with it and gain knowledge over the rest of us.
Re:There really needs to be some kind of hold .. (Score:2)
Sure there are so crazy people who want human clones NOW, but most researchers (including these) are opposed to reproductive cloning. Many however see therapuetic cloning to have a great deal of potential to benefit human medicine, and considerably less difficult ethical issues. For instance, the goal of the research announced today (were it to work perfectly) would be to create stem cells identical to the ones present in the first stage of development of the donor. In essence they are recreating something that already existed in the past because it can be of great use to the person alive right now. Unfortunately those cells were present so early in the individual's life that you could make a whole new human out of them, but only a very few people would want to give them that chance.
In the end it makes little difference, since it's doubtful that the world-wide community will ever pass enough laws to keep it from happening somewhere.
Re:There really needs to be some kind of hold .. (Score:2, Interesting)
But I'm a moral person, or at least, I try to be, and I find the amount of experimentation on the actual human building blocks of life to be outstripping what anyone in the public expects or even realises what can be done.
Already you can select a child that won't have a certain genetic disease - how long is it before you can select a child that has higher intelligence? Greater athleticism? Both?
Most people don't even realise that the above level of selection is not only possible, but there are people out there researching as hard as they can to try and *do* it - to be the first company to genetically engineer a "better" human.
And what will we call these new children? Gods?
And what will they call us?
Unevolved Humans? Not much better than intelligent monkeys?
And how do you suppose *they* will treat us? Wrath of Khan anyone?
This all really, really scares me, and I'm sorry if expressing my fears is considered 'trolling'