Harvard to Clone Human Embryos? 549
Lifix writes ""Harvard University scientists have asked the university's ethical review board for permission to produce cloned human embryos for disease research, potentially becoming the first researchers in the nation to wade into a divisive area of study that has become a presidential campaign issue."
Yes, it's legal... (Score:5, Informative)
Oblig. Simpsons Ref. (Score:3, Funny)
"I think the award for best off-the-cuff remark goes to Lisa."
"Actually, I saw them in the hallway, and I've been working on it."
Human cloning... (Score:5, Interesting)
Personally I think those are questions best left to speculation, and not ones that should ever have their answers truly known by anyone.
Re:Human cloning... (Score:2, Insightful)
They want their ideas back.
Re:Human cloning... (Score:4, Interesting)
Or when natural humans become the "inferior" minority and are then subject to racism and mindless stereotypes.
Re:Human cloning... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Human cloning... (Score:3, Insightful)
Genetic manipulation qualifies as Eugenics. A lot of things do - checking the fetus for defects, and aborting as necessary does. Choosing to abort daughters, because you want a son (used to be common in China, I don't know whether it still is - should produce an interesting society in about 20 years if so) qualifies as "eugenics".
Based on the results of the last
Re:Jude Law called... (Score:2)
Is that some Gattaca reference?
Re:Human cloning... (Score:4, Insightful)
"I don't see a slippery slope," she said, "because the technology to do reproductive cloning in mammals is there, and I don't think that anything we do is going to significantly change the development of that technology. What stops it is that the law says we can't do it, and it's banned."
Preventing cloning of embryos for stem cell research does not in any way help prevent human cloning, it only prevents science and medicine from progressing. The technology is there -- we can't change that -- but what we can do is use it to save lives.
Re:Human cloning... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Human cloning... (Score:3, Insightful)
Do we let millions upon millions die _after_ they've matured into full humans, or do we save them by killing millions upon millions before they are anything more than a mass of cells?
Another thing to think about is this - so many millions in this world are killed everyday due to poverty, disease and strife - are we being fair in spending money on this rather than that?
I could go on so forth ad infinitum, but the point remains that this i
Re:Human cloning... (Score:5, Insightful)
And, before people start shooting from their various moral highgrounds, please realise that none of the embryos that we're talking about have been ripped from anyone's womb without their consent. The few hundred embryos available for research use are the excess produce of IVF programmes, and if they weren't being used to further medical science then they'd be lying frozen in a tube somewhere or destroyed.
So, talk of "killing millions upon millions before they are anything more than a mass of cells" should be saved for the likes of National Enquirer. There aren't millions of millions, and they aren't being killed. But I guess "baby killer" is an easy argument to make for those too afraid to examine the facts properly.
Re:Human cloning... (Score:2)
My point was merely to put across to the original poster my ideas - embryos may not be fully grown or humans to you or me - but they are to several people. It's easy for us to say that they are just bags of several cells, it's hard for those
Re:Human cloning... (Score:3, Interesting)
Studies have shown that the public - even many doctors - believe that the research is carried out on foetuses that are at least partially developed. When asked to draw what they think an embryo looks like most people draw something that has a head, a torso and four limbs.
It's mistaken beliefs like that, fuelled by the scaremongering of extremists in the pro-life camp, that unfairly label the scientist
Re:Human cloning... (Score:2)
So what? There are minorities all over the world who believe in various types of horseshit. Just because they believe it doesn't mean I or anyone else is required to pay attention. They have the right to speak, but they don't have the right to be heard.
Max
Re:Human cloning... (Score:2)
Just go out there and suggest this to people across the world, immaterial of where they're from. They'll imaging babies being killed, as the original poster portrayed them to be.
I suppose you have not had to deal with convincing religious folks on science. I have. It's simply not possible.
And guess what? The government is not going to change its policy because of what a bunch of scientists believe. They care abo
Re:Human cloning... (Score:3, Insightful)
This is simply wrong. Noone sane argues against the fact that single-cell organisms are alive.
The question is whether they are human.
Re:Human cloning... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Human cloning... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Human cloning... (Score:3, Informative)
No. We start cloning stem cells. As far as I am concerned a stem cell is not a baby. The people dying of AIDS, are, however people.
FWIW, I'm pro theraputic cloning (as you have probably deduced) and anti the creation to to-term human clones.
Re:Human cloning... (Score:3, Interesting)
Don't get me wrong; I'm pro choice, and I don't see anything particularly terrible about harvesting cells from aborted fetuses that have already died. But it's one thing to use cells from a dead organism, and a completely DI
Re:Human cloning... (Score:2)
And yes, just because it's an embryo and can't possibly be considered to be even remotely human except by a few wild-eyed fanatics, it DOES make it right.
Evil and ignorant religious extremism aren't strangers; in fact, they're bedfellows.
Max
Re:Human cloning... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Human cloning... (Score:3, Insightful)
But it's one thing to use cells from a dead organism, and a completely DIFFERENT thing to create a living organism and experiment on it.
Why? A bunch of electrochemical impulses do not constitute a person. It's okay to experiment on planets. It's okay (for many people) to experiment on animals. Why not a bunch of human cells? It's not like they are experimenting on fully-developed babies - these are mindless clumps of cells. It's as unethical to experiment on them as it is to experiment on toenail
BLANKED REPLY TO EVERYONE FREAKING OUT: (Score:5, Insightful)
1. Stem cell research: good.
2. Cultivating stem cells acquired from IVF sources: good.
3. As I've heard suggested in the media, cultivating stem cells acquired from aborted embryos, fetuses, whatever: good. DISCLAIMER: DO NOT PANIC. I AM NOT ACCUSING ANYONE OF DOING THIS. IT IS JUST HYPOTHETICAL FOR CHRIST'S SAKE. Sheesh, People around here are too high strung.
4. Cloning stem cells: good.
5. Cloning entire embryos: touchy ground. I think it's different from using already cast-off tissue that would have died anyway. And, the phrase "cloning embryos" is too damn unspecific anyway. Are you talking about actual cloning, or just culturing cells? If cloning, I think it's a bad idea. Which is what this whole stupid argument thread is about.
I see an embryo, and of course a fetus, as an entire unit, a potential person. Therefore, if that potential person is already dead, as with castoff IVF material, or the clinic idea I've heard mentioned in the media, I don't see any harm in it. On the other hand, if you've just created a viable embryo just to disassemble it for the stem cells, that seems kind of ugly. And I do think it would be only a few steps from some much more serious nastiness down the road. I don't trust scientists as far as I can throw them, sorry. I've read too much about what they've done in the past. Like the guy who invented the lobotomy and then proceeded to inflict it on thousands of patients because he thought he was "helping" them.
6. I am not particularly religious, I have no desire to outlaw abortion, IVF, or any other such thing, I'm not an ignorant, evil redneck, and this is all just my opinion anyway.
Slashdot, people, is an OPINION SITE. Not necessarily the news.
Now, THIS is my WHOLE opinion on the subject, everybody relax.
Re:Human cloning... (Score:2)
For example, if you're working on curing a serious disease, and you're using, say, rhesus monkeys, I'm not going to give you a hard time.
But if you're just testing cosmetics, I'm not going to weep one bitter tear when a bunch of college kids breaks those animals out of your lab. I'm a little too old to participate, but I sure wouldn
ffs you're supposed to be an intelligent bunch (Score:2)
You want the TRUTH? (Score:2, Funny)
We will engineer super intelligent beings that have giant heads and perfect vision in all light spectrums. The human race will eventually evolve (die out) into this new race only to find out that genetic mutations will kill off their existence! So they develop means to travel back in time and kidnap goatse.cx guy so they can anal probe him!
The reasoning for the anal probe is obvious: It's so the future big-headed, grey-skinned, lanky humans can figure out how not to die. Do
Re:Human cloning... (Score:2)
To the extent that it works (which is probably small, the environmental affects being what they are) we end up with an army all of whose soldiers have the same weaknesses.
It's like monocultures in agricultre, except people wil be explicitly looking for ways to kill off the clone.
Except for very special circumstances, evolution is hard on groups with low gentic diversity, and the selective pressure on a battlefield is quite intense.
Re:Human cloning... (Score:5, Insightful)
I am sick and tired of people always assuming that scientists are somewhere beteen Dr Mengele and Dr Frankenstein. Your idea of morality has nothing to do with science.
These people are doing this research to try and save lives and cure diseases. Anyone who says we should not do this is mad. I am an asmatic If I had the choice I would perefer not to be one.
You say "..."perfect" human for soldiers" you seem to forget that you would need to find a mother to carry the child and then raise it for 18 years and then train it! I think the training part would "make" the soldier, not the lab!
Regarding the level of gentic diversity, if we cloned every person on earth we would be left with the same genetic diversity to begin with.
Gentic diversity come from sexual reproduction, take two clones, not including genetic recombination, there are 70368744177664 geneticaly different children they could have.
Do not mistake your morality with objective "reality" a good example is organ transplantation. Go back 200 years and explain to people that because little timmys heart is no good you are going to take the heart from someone else and use it to replace timmy heart. Explain that this is fine and little timmy will be health again.
Some people mention things like bringing Hilter back... well given a different upbringing Hitler clone would probably give Poland a miss, especialy if raised in Harvard. People often forget about upbringing as a crucial factorm, if raised in Boston he might have problems writing Mein Kampf in German!
By "super-humans" I like to think of disease free . I mean we dont all dress the same so why would we all clone the same. You have visons of 6ft tall muscular, blond haired , blue eyed people marching in file.
Personaly I want the best for my children and that is all. For exolition to progress you need "selection". Now we must have selection in a population: If you look at the Dodo it was as good as it needed to be for its island paradise. No predators, no need to fly, just get fat for the lean winter months. Along come humans and rats and bye bye Dodo. The moment we accepted modern medicine we preventeed people from dying who "naturally" would have died. For example a type 1 diabetic, his children now have an increased suceptability. Continue this for 100 genertations and we have a problem. Now we can either solve the problem before it happens or treat the person after the fact. Treament after the fact means that their children will be born with the same mutations, and will require treatment too. Now if we just repair the mutated genes in the embryo then problem solved.
It is a bit like having a well patched system or running virus removal tools once an hour to keep your system virus free.
No (Score:3, Informative)
It is not that we are weakening the genetic pool when some people survive who would not have lived in the past. Evolution is based on survival. The survival of such people reflects a basic concept of evolution. The world and its selective pressures are in flux. From an evolutionary standpoint, havin
Re:Human cloning... (Score:2)
Or worse, combining genetic manipulation with cloning, creating "super-humans"
How the hell could this be a bad thing? Making your kids stronger, faster, smarter, immune to genetic diseases? Damn straight we should be trying to make them better than we are.
Max
ERROR: Normal political syntax no longer valid.. (Score:4, Insightful)
"Michael J Fox, you know him right? Well someday.."
I believe they should talk to people about the issues and the benefits instead of the constant name dropping of a few celebrities stem cells and cloning could *magically* heal. And since when is scientific research in line with religious dogma or morality? Science is the terrier that tugs at the great curtain. As we legislate based on dogma, many other countries are passing us by in science and technology.
Re:ERROR: Normal political syntax no longer valid. (Score:2)
Not being in line with "religious dogma" I could understand...Not being in line with morality is another thing entirely. I hope you don't see the two as synonymous.
However, I agree about the celebrity name-dropping...
Re:ERROR: Normal political syntax no longer valid. (Score:2)
Give it time... give it wisdom... allow the people, the world, the scientific community to mature and understand what is at stake. Reasonable policy will follow revelation
Re:ERROR: Normal political syntax no longer valid. (Score:2)
The distinction was intentional.... Many modern Christians seem to act like anything but.
Re:ERROR: Normal political syntax no longer valid. (Score:4, Funny)
He's gonna be a martian though, so again the jews will get all pissy and throw stones.
If anything will put the life expectency over 100 (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:If anything will put the life expectency over 1 (Score:3, Insightful)
There is enough and more space in the world. It's just our cities which are crowded. Next time, take a drive around to the wilderness and outlands a few miles off your city and you'd notice how much free space is out there.
The only thing of worry is the crunch it may have on our natural resources, but I'm sure we'll find a way around it. Afterall, our species has shown the most resilience only when pushed to our limits.
It's going to be a long century, and at the moment, this kind of thing isn'
Re:If anything will put the life expectency over 1 (Score:2)
ie: don't let anyone under 30 have any kids . Then after a few generations, raise that by some number of years. You slowly but surely can get to people living for a few hundred years without any major health problems. (while at the same time without overpopulating the earth). Although I'd imagine it would never happen in the real world...
Why.... (Score:3, Funny)
Maybe if some of us took a few days off from praying for the President, and his children, and their peace of mind, and Iraq, we could pray for the researchers to happen upon a divine epiphany, and if they were good, God fearing servents of our Lord, he'd just write it on up and send it on down via an Angel.
I bet we could get that on the 700 Club!!! Think of how much money would be saved by not wasting any of it or the time on science, and better yet with the donation to the 700 Club we could feed poor kids in Africa, or by the Church a Holy 120' Conversion Vessel of The Lord, with day spa!
More information (Score:4, Informative)
Here're the Yahoo! blurb [yahoo.com] and the NZ Herald [nzherald.co.nz] stories.
Alan M. Dershowitz's Burden (Score:2, Informative)
When asked why he has chosen himself as the seed of all future Harvard clones, Professor Dershowitz responded, "Cloning is evil. Someone must stop others from cloning themselves and the answer is a worldwide army of Alan Dershowitz's working together to stop this scourge in its tracks."
A greatful world thanks Professor Dershowitz for choosing himself to shoulder this heavy burden, as only he can.
I'm for it, I guess (Score:5, Interesting)
My point is that as long as we keep the clones somewhat small - say less than 1024 cells, I have no moral problem with disposing them - that I'm not killing anything. Yes this has a HUGE grey area, but I think that a reasonable compromise can be reached.
Let the flame/holy wars begin...
Re:I'm for it, I guess (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I'm for it, I guess (Score:5, Funny)
Sure, they will be marketed as kilocells but when the marketing folks get their grubby hands on them we will only get 1000!!
Re:I'm for it, I guess (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm against it, for what it means (Score:3, Interesting)
"Life" in that sense is already trivial (Score:3, Insightful)
If you are looking for an ethical or metaphysical meaning to take from this, it's that small bundles of cells just aren't important; it is much more important to make sure that babies, children and adults are hea
Re:I'm for it, I guess (Score:5, Funny)
640 cells should be enough for anyone...
Re:I'm for it, I guess (Score:2)
Why, can't they be people three or more?
Binary bastard!
Re:I'm for it, I guess (Score:2)
That has about as much chance of working as getting the anti-choice if-you-jack-off-you're-killing-potential-unborn-c
Fanatics are, by definition, unreasonable.
Max
The Question (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The Question (Score:2, Insightful)
This is a religious/ethical question, not a biological one. Thus no amount of research or medical data can "answer" it. (What, do you think that someone with a really big microscope is going to say "This is when the soul goes in?")
We know about the stages of embryo development, but the idea of Life with a capital L is subjective and very personal.
Re:The Question (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:The Question (Score:2)
Max
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Did you read the article? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Did you read the article? (Score:2)
justification de jour (Score:3, Funny)
I wish them luck (Score:2, Insightful)
If they're allowed it could free up stem cell research in general by providing "victimless" stem cells.
With all the talk of "super cures", it's about time somebody got the ball moving.
Cloning illegal? (Score:2)
Re:Cloning illegal? (Score:2)
There is a fundamental difference. They're doing the latter and not the former.
The government policy against the latter is only that it cannot be federally funded (since it uses the tax money from people who may oppose it, or so the claims go).
Re:Cloning illegal? (Score:2)
Heh, now that's a rare policy if true.
Like tax money from people is never otherwise used for something if they oppose it.
Re:Cloning illegal? (Score:2, Interesting)
it seems to me that the government policy on this matter is only what it is, because its more friendly towards the religious groups that are against cloning altogeth
Re:Cloning illegal? (Score:3, Informative)
I'll quote from the NZ Herald article [nzherald.co.nz] -
Current law prohibits the use of federal funds to make human embryonic stem cells, and in August 2001 President George W Bush said scientists could work only on a few already existing cell lines, using federal funds.
The Bush Administration argues that people who oppose experimenting on human embryos should not have their tax dollars used in such research, but it is silent on what privately funded groups can do.
I gues
Cannibals need breakfast food too... (Score:3, Funny)
JIMMY DEAN BREAKFAST EMBRYOS!
Why is cloning controversial? (Score:5, Insightful)
Because of what might happen? Because we've seen some crazy science fiction movies?
It's ridiculous that people who least understand the research hold the strongest opinions about it and try to stop it from happening.
Now why exactly is any research involving embryos controversial? People aren't lining up at abortion clinics to make an easy 50 bucks by donating their unborn babies to research. Is it better to put the embryos in a landfill than to make use out of them?
Politics should not dictate research. It certainly should never prevent research.
The flip side is that people use superman as a political tool on the opposite side. "Let us do research. We'll make superman walk again!" I guess that won't be happening. If only he could have held out 'till election day...
Re:Why is cloning controversial? (Score:2, Interesting)
Is this not what's happening if someone goes for an abortion ? I understand there may be a proper reason for it in some cases, but effectively, what you ARE doing is creating life and destroying it. Does *that* life have a soul ? Does it not ?
The point is, in the course of cloning, we may learn something which will improve our understanding of the human anatomy or DNA. This understanding need not always lead to something negati
Re:Why is cloning controversial? (Score:2)
Seems more like a religious question, with the concept of soul and what not. I'll probably be modded down for this, but who cares. Religion has _always_ been the reason why science and progress has been withheld. Right from the days when religion could not accept the fact that science could know more or be right, religion has always hindered science.
It really pisses me off.
The link you gave suggests that it would be a real real long time before we see any useful results. Which
Re:Why is cloning controversial? (Score:3, Insightful)
While most dogmatic aspects of religion clearly should be separated from the state, there is one area where overlap is bound to happen - morality of behavior.
Many of our laws are based on widely-held beliefs of right and wrong. For instance, why is it wrong to murder somebody? If you could clea
Clones? They're already all around us... (Score:5, Insightful)
Anyone who is against cloning has to come up with better arguments than "it's unnatural".
Personally, I feel the discussion about cloning is largely provoked by people with political agendas, as are many divisive arguments around the world. People who have true feelings about the value of human life should better try to help the victims of war and famine, man-made disasters that kill millions.
But, I guess one clone is more of a danger to our claims of moral superiority than a million dead Sudanese or Congolese.
Call me a cynic but this debate is full of shit.
Re:Clones? They're already all around us... (Score:3, Insightful)
Gattaca, and ethical dilemmas (Score:5, Insightful)
Remember, the goal of this is not to clone entire humans (although, someday, who knows what will happen) but instead to perfect genetic engineering.
People will likely look back one day on the movie Gattaca [imdb.com] as amazingly prophetic. For those unfamiliar with the film, it did an amazing job portraying what society may be like when genetic engineering becomes perfected. Coming, sooner than many think, are the days when we can engineer the child of two parents; not to be a perfect child, but instead to be the "best" of those parents. The child is more intelligent, stronger, etc. than the average child produced by those parents would be, and will have a much lower likelihood of diseases and other problems. This will be a fantastic thing, but those children born the old-fashioned way are likely going to be disadvantaged. Because we'll be able to weed them out just by plucking a hair and checking their DNA.
Should we forbid someone from taking a certain job based on their genetic makeup? And how long can we breed the "best" children before the best become so far ahead of the worst, that the worst no longer have any "value" to society at all? Those will be the real ethical dilemmas. The so-called ethical dilemmas we're faced with today are just temporary hurdles created by people who are frightened of progress and/or don't understand what the goals are.
don't believe the hype (Score:2)
i mean look at stephen hawking: he can't run, who knows how healthy his immune system is, but he's still an extremely valuable member of society
and people know this
and clearly, some people are gifted intellectually, and some are not
but when you go into intelligence and try to quantify it, there's not much we can quantify and measure about "intelligence" as it is: it's an intangible
sure there are iq tests, but this is useless: so
Re:Gattaca, and ethical dilemmas (Score:2, Insightful)
Maybe but maybe not, it might be more likely that they will be treasured for their inherent genetic variety, not to speak of their uniqueness and "purity". Gentic variety is one of the priceless treasures of this world and keeping it all in a tube decreases the net variety over time as it is static and not free to evolve naturally. Prized for their value as objects of knowledge as the genetically "streamlined" suffer a boom
Re:Gattaca, and ethical dilemmas (Score:3, Interesting)
I've never understood the premise of the movie Gattaca. In the movie, the "hero" cheats his way into an astronaut's position by using the DNA of another man. But the "hero" should never have been an astronaut. In one scene, he's running on a treadmill and his fitness is not u
Why are people so afraid of progress? (Score:2, Insightful)
Maybe we should have stopped when we "invented" fire way back when, because it can be used for detructive purposes, but seriously, what kind of life and society would we have today if we had?
Lets try to learn a lessons from the dark middleages and maybe not fear knowledge, science and progress so much.
If you are against stem cell research.... (Score:3, Interesting)
You should spend an hour caring for a person with a spinal cord injury. Better, why do you not move in with such a person and live with them for a week or so. How many of you will handle it?
I am not taking this out of my ass; I have actually been around people who cannot move and have no hope of improvement because of their conditions. My best friend has a mild-form of CP; the guy has been suffering all his life because his fucking legs are crooked and there is nothing he can do about it! Do me a favor, look into his eyes and then tell him that you are against stem cell research. Tell him that it sucks to be him because he was born different. Then visit a nursing home and try to take care of patients with Alzheimer's....
I still do not realize why this issue is an issue for our presidential candidates... This is a no brainer that should not be discussed in a country where religion is separate from the state. Then again, just like Kerry I am a liberal guy from Massachusetts :)
Some people's minds need an upgrade (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course we know that this book makes no mention of stem cells or cloning embryos because it can't. However, sadly enough, certain people use this piece of material as a means to scare and manipulate others into thinking this sort of science somehow equates to the work of the "devil" or some other "fictional" evil character that punishes those who disobey (what essentially is) another man's law.
Now, this line of thinking may have seemed legitimate thousands or even hundreds of years ago where people really believed Chris Columbus and his ships would fall of the edge of the Earth, but today, in a world where we have the capability to send robots 50 million miles away and land on other planets I think it's time that we put all this imaginary, spooky stuff to bed. We're just to intelligent for this.
This is progress folks and we need to move on. At times it seems scary, but that has never stopped us before. Put it this way, when was the last time one scientist beheaded another scientist for disproving his theories? When was the last time a group of engineers at one university jailed and then publicly hanged one of their fellow engineers for spreading an "evil" belief that Linux is a sucky operating system? Think about it and then you may laugh.
This is just wrong... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This is just wrong... (Score:5, Interesting)
Others suggest that to be human, you need higher-order consciousness. That is why it is acceptable to "pull the plug" on hopelessly brain-damaged patients that have no hope of recovering consciousness, even if the brain stem survives and there is some level of autonomic respiration.
On the other hand, allowing REAL human beings to die by our inaction on studying blastocyst stem cells, I consider that unethical.
Re:Oh no... (Score:5, Informative)
None of the proposed experiments involves attempts to produce a cloned person.
So, no. They're not going to have clones, atleat not yet.
Goodluck on your search, though.
Re:Oh no... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:It has to be said... so mod me down if you must (Score:4, Funny)
You mean these [funny.co.uk] ones?
Fortunately... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Fortunately... (Score:2, Insightful)
Not on slashdot of course... but I'm sure they exist.
Re:Fortunately... (Score:5, Insightful)
Speaking as one from inside the scientific community, a lot of researchers have their own "pet" ideas on cures for the disease du jour, and these ideas don't always have the strongest link to reality. When these ideas have made their way into human subject studies, people have died, even though it the concept worked PERFECTLY in mouse and rat models. And that should underline how little we actually understand the big picture of human physiology.
I believe that the goal of medicine should be to preserve human life. This is why I study to be a doctor, this is why my goal is to be a physician scientist. However I do not see how this goal may be adhered to by killing lives in their beginning, or worse, creating lives only to destroy them.
The Nuremberg Code (available here [umich.edu]) states that the voluntary consent of the human subject is "absolutely essential". The disregard some scientists have for this, purely in the name of science, disturbs me greatly.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Unfortunately... (Score:2)
Not to seem racist or anything, but to draw a parellel, perhaps those who will want to prevent that _will_ be required to leave by law.
Re:Unfortunately... (Score:3, Interesting)
Why do we want choice? Why do we want to be able to choose our job? Why do we want to be different yet accepted by society? I think the answer is easy:
We want the choice of job to be able to get the job that will make us happy. We want to be able to be ourselves even if we are different and still have the community's support. Because that makes us happy and content.
It all somehow drops back on us wanting to be happy. But people in BNW ARE happy. I'm
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Unfortunately... (Score:3, Insightful)
No, we wouldn't be happy, as we are the savages, grown up in a totally different society.
Re:Unfortunately... (Score:2)
Re:Unfortunately... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I thought. (Score:2)
They plan to use technology similar to that used by South Korean scientists, who announced in February they had cloned a human embryo as a source of valuable stem cells.
So, yes. They're using similar research.
Re:I don't like this (Score:2, Insightful)
Most places it's 24 weeks, before that, it's a womens period (menstrual cycles), with the same rights, and in most cases the same viability, without serious medical intervention, and even with that, a low chance of anything resembling a normal worthwhile life.
Before you go moving the 24 week target, have a look at what happens if you go too early, you become the Catholic Church, and then every sperm IS sacred.
I guess what you have to ask yourself, is this.
If
Re:I don't like this (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Mini Me (Score:3, Insightful)
Mod me down, and I'll pray to my merciless God to make you age faster.
Re:Patenting human beings (Score:3, Insightful)
Then again, I didn't think combovers, algorithms, or using a laser pointer to exercise cats would be patented either.