Hybrid Human-Animal DNA Experiments Raise Concerns 311
Kevin Fishburne writes
"British scientists are calling for a new agency to oversee the mixing of human and animal DNA, which is progressing at a rate most may not be aware of: 'Among experimentation that might spark concern are those where human brain cells might change animal brains, those that could lead to the fertilization of human eggs in animals and any modifications of animals that might create attributes considered uniquely human, like facial features, skin or speech. ... Some disagree. "We think some of these should be done, but they should be done in an open way to maintain public confidence," said Robin Lovell-Badge, head of stem cell biology and developmental genetics at Britain's Medical Research Council, one of the expert group members. He said experiments injecting human brain cells into the brains of rats might help develop new stroke treatments or that growing human skin on mice could further understanding of skin cancer.'"
Burn the ethics committee (Score:2, Flamebait)
Burn all the ethics committee, they slow down research and they do not stop abuse; they only stop bad feelings into the weak minded politically correct, they also provide jobs for those wuss. I say burn them! Burn them with napalm, that will teach them!
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Then how do you propose we stop abuse? Is having no watchdogs better than having bad watchdogs? Before advocating the end of one system, perhaps you could at least provide an alternative?
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That depends on your world view. But I would define it as generally as possible:
- Activity that could potentially lead to our end as a race.
- Activity that increases the suffering of individuals or groups without their consent.
- Activity designed to ultimately remove our freedoms/rights.
- Activity that would terminate individuals groups without their consent.
This is further complicated in context by the fact that at some point we may have caused animals to be intelligent and therefore ethically should we
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This is further complicated in context by the fact that at some point we may have caused animals to be intelligent and therefore ethically should we not afford them the same rights/freedoms as us? And prevent abuse on them too?
Heinlein pondered this [willmorgan.org] in 1947 (the link is to the full text of Jerry Was A Man). And what was that line from Star Trek IV? Something along the lines of "my compassion for someone doesn't depend on how intelligent they are".
I explored this in some of my own fiction posted here at slas
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i'm sorry for posting an almost identical reply, i had not seen yours.
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Some risk analysis committee composed of emeritus engineers, scientist and doctors would be a better alternative and keep the soft sciences major out of there.
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I agree, to a point. But don't you think society as a whole has a role? You may not agree with them, but your committee makes decisions that will affect them..
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That is what regulation by democratic government are for. If the populace want to have something ban, let them do it. What I oppose is the artificial slowing down of research by incompetent ethic committee that don't even know the problem domain.
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If the populace want to have something ban, let them do it.
So the majority just gets to trample the minority? That's just as bad as these stupid ethics committees running the show.
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what is abuse? its just wherever we decide to draw the line, right? lets decide to draw NO LINE. voila! no abuse!
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Ethics is an important part of Science. And should be considered whenever you do an experiment. But ethics are rarely if ever black and white. But something that needs to be weighed.
Do you jump to animal testing before you sit down and do the math and run simulations?
Do you do a psychological study without having an educated hypothesis what will happen? If it doesn't happen when should you terminate so you can re-evaluate?
I am not saying we should allow all the nuts go out and say this is evil because God
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Ethics is an important part of Science.
it shouldn't be.
And should be considered whenever you do an experiment.
i disagree. scientific research should be done for no reason other than curiosity. no other consideration should come into the picture.
Do you jump to animal testing before you sit down and do the math and run simulations?
yes, no substitute to real experiments.
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Ethics is an important part of Science.
it shouldn't be.
And should be considered whenever you do an experiment.
i disagree. scientific research should be done for no reason other than curiosity. no other consideration should come into the picture.
Do you jump to animal testing before you sit down and do the math and run simulations?
yes, no substitute to real experiments.
I'm sure that Jews and other "undesirables" in Nazi Germany would agree wholeheartedly.
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So you submit that ethics are unethical? You would go back to things like Tuskegee syphilis experiment [rbs2.com], INjecting people with cancer cells [rbs2.com], or any of the other myriad horrors done in the name of science?
Here's an idea -- how about we use you as an experimental subject? I'm sure we can think of some horribly unethical things we could do to you.
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The risk analysis committee that I have proposed would probably have rejected the first one and accepted the second.
Also, if I am terminally ill use me as a experimental subject, I won't care at all, I will be proud.
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this. i say go ahead, do whatever the fuck you want. clone humans, create human-hippo hybrids, do any fucking thing. unless the genes of a creature are >50% human, no human rights need apply. all this tiptoeing is harming science.
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The ethics committee says, "Do not burn ethics committee." Perhaps you should try taunting them instead.
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How cool would it be if your dog could simply tell you he's hungry [...]
If I know dogs a bit, they'd try to convince us all day long that they're hungry, or at least in the mood for a snack! Dogs are quite capable of telling us that they want food already. They definitely do not need speech for that.
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"Dogs are quite capable of telling us that they want food already. "
Amen brother. Even Lassie wanted somebody to open the fridge and was not indicating that miller Joe had broken a bone down by the river.
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One thing we haven't really realized is that any animal with vocal chords also has a speech center in their brain and speaks to other animals. True that we know of no other animal with speech as complex or sophisticated as ours, but anyone who doesn't understand what a dog is saying when he tells you "get the fuck away from my territory or I'll eat you" or "OUCH" is more dimwitted than the dog.
You think birds or whales sing to make music? I doubt any species but us make music.
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How do you plan to do that with a human brain.
It actaully a lot easier to do what you want with a dogs brain.
How cool would it be if your dog could simply tell you he's hungry. When he sits right next to his bowl and stares right in it we know he is hungry
you could explain to your dog that he shouldn't destroy your furniture. "Bad Dog... NO"
Or you could show him around town and explain to him that he can go where he wants, but shouldn't mindlessly cross the street and that this is his home. If you let a do
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They don't need to tell you they're hungry - they're always hungry. When they destroy your kitchen they're hungry AND bored.
You can explain till the cows come home that you don't want him destroying your furniture. The second your back is turned it all reverts to the natural state of any unattended item in the presence of a Staffie - a chew toy.
As for teaching them to cross roads safely, good luck. My parents kept Staffies for about 30 year
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but it would be a lot easier to communicate with your pet if it could speak. people have pets for companionship, this would increase companionship. so, good.
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With "dog years" being about 5 times as short that first year is equal to 5 human years which is just about right.
A puppy can walk hours after being born. That doesnt make them better walkers
Watchers? (Score:2)
Pretty soon we're going to have Golden Retrievers with human-level intelligence running around being chased by vicious kill beasts. Who would have thought Dean Koontz could be so prophetic?
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Re:Watchers? (Score:4, Insightful)
H.G. Wells was a great author, but that does not qualify him to be a credible source of perspective on the ethics of genetic research, especially when his implicit goal was to be salacious enough to sell books, not to have the most honest and balanced possible view.
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If these experiments get me a catgirl Fairuza Balk, I can only say I'm okay with it.
If she can lick herself, what does she need you for?
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I seriously doubt that unless you work in a brain trauma ward.
Like any freeway in the US? Seriously, the reason that we're progressing so rapidly with autonomous driving vehicle is that the current bar (human drivers) is so low that a Z80 with 64K RAM and two floppies could outsmart the average American driver on most days.
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That's completely ridicuSQUIRREL!
At least it is safe! (Score:2)
CC.
Oh noes... (Score:3, Insightful)
They reached this conclusion (Score:3)
Among experimentation that might spark concern are those where human brain cells might change animal brains, those that could lead to the fertilization of human eggs in animals and any modifications of animals that might create attributes considered uniquely human, like facial features, skin or speech.
They reached this conclusion after much consideration, i.e. watching a preview of Rise of the Planet of the Apes: In the Beginning [wikipedia.org]
Stalins dream might come true... (Score:2)
Reminds me of this:
http://www.environmentalgraffiti.com/sciencetech/stalins-deranged-vision-human-ape-super-race/1257 [environmen...affiti.com]
Saw it on History Channel a few years back. Didn't know there was active research going on in mixing human DNA with brains.
Isn't this story a coincidence when the move Rise of the Planet of the Apes is about to come out?? Pretty scary
eat your heart out (Score:3)
Look on the Bright side (Score:2)
Anything that leads to giant hybrid super-soldiers who have poignant and heartbreaking back stories while providing insightful and challenging commentary on contemporary social and transgenic issues with cute girls is A-OK by me.
www.hip-flask.com
No one expects the Elephantman Inquisition!
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Sorry, that should be www.hipflask.com. I was close.
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FFS (Score:5, Insightful)
Zoonotic diseases are certainly a real issue(though we've caught plenty just through good, old-fashioned, living in close proximity), and any techniques that would hypothetically involve the production of excessively human central nervous systems in laboratory animals might get ethically dodgy; but are "skin" and "facial features" really 'uniquely human' attributes that squick us out so much we just can't stand it? The idea that having a cartilage-and-soft-tissue structure that looks kind of human, rather than having a differently shaped one, is somehow an 'ethical' problem, rather than pure squeamishness, is just emotive rot.
"The effect of custom, in preventing any misgiving respecting the rules of conduct which mankind impose on one another, is all the more complete because the subject is one on which it is not generally considered necessary that reasons should be given, either by one person to others, or by each to himself. People are accustomed to believe, and have been encouraged in the belief by some who aspire to the character of philosophers, that their feelings, on subjects of this nature, are better than reasons, and render reasons unnecessary." -J.S. Mill
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any techniques that would hypothetically involve the production of excessively human central nervous systems in laboratory animals might get ethically dodgy; but are "skin" and "facial features" really 'uniquely human' attributes that squick us out so much we just can't stand it? The idea that having a cartilage-and-soft-tissue structure that looks kind of human, rather than having a differently shaped one, is somehow an 'ethical' problem, rather than pure squeamishness, is just emotive rot.
What about a Lucy Lu clone body, but with a dog/chimp hybrid brain tweaked to find basement dwellers attractive? Is it a pet or a slave?
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My point is not that there are no ethically difficult
Catgirls first (Score:5, Funny)
If making catgirls becomes illegal in Britain, we'll just make them in Japan. That would be disastrous. The Japanese are already years ahead of us in catgirl technology. [fastcodesign.com] We cannot afford a greater catgirl gap.
Uniquely Human. (Score:2)
...any modifications of animals that might create attributes considered uniquely human, like facial features, skin or speech.
Wait...what?
And so what? (Score:3)
So we mix some code together and it's what? Not what nature intended? Who give a rat's patoot? Are we playing [insert favorite diety here]? Again, so what?
I'm just having some trouble with the ethical implications. WHAT ethical implications? How is a hybrid any more good or evil than a naturally occurring organism? Help me out here guys, and no offense, but if you can't make an argument without reference to diefic entity nonsense, I'm not interested (unless of course, it's really, really funny).
Re:And so what? (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem is that species have evolved with what they have over time, so that problematic and crippling mutations are rapidly selected out.
If you start creating hybrids, you create traits for which a species has not evolved, and as such those traits may have massively debilitating effects on the creature.
Effectively, when we've long learnt that sometimes the best thing to do for an animal that is suffering, is to put it down, because it's more ethical than letting it suffer, then is it not ethically wrong to create creatures that will suffer with the intention of keeping them alive for experiments?
Would it be fair to manipulate a human embryo to make it grow up with skin cancer all over it's body to examine skin cancer? is it fair to do it to an animal?
I'll admit I side with the activists here, I think it is cruel and quite horrible, however, I'm also not sure that if we want to advance science that there's any alternative, and that leaves us at a disturbing crossroads- is the advancement of science worth ignoring ethical concerns? If it is in this case then where does it stop, where is the line drawn at which point it is not worth it? or do we carry on until we really do have mad scientists like in the movies!
Re:And so what? (Score:4, Insightful)
All of this requires perspective. Tests done on animals that were both fatal and brutal have in the end saved millions of lives. I would gladly personally torture an animal or a dozen to death if it would save a million human lives, and that is a natural instinct. It's what's put us where we are in the first place. Animals that are vicious tend to survive better in a universe that doesn't care.
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It's very much a topic explored by things like the game '1378' which has players take turns as border guards and defectors in East Germany. As a border gua
Sub-creation (Score:3)
Are we playing [insert favorite diety here]? Again, so what?
Agreed. Man was created in God's image according to some major religions. As I understand it, and as J.R.R. Tolkien understood it, this includes the capacity to create, and sub-creation of works that echo God's creation is one way that mortals honor God.
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One issue could be the question of the rights of the hybrid. For example, humans have many rights that cows don't, but what about a cow with a human central nervous system?
Or other primates with bits and pieces of human "code" in their brains? If we say that this animal isn't human, and therefore only deserving of the rights normally given to other primates even though it shows clear signs of human intelligence, wouldn't that somehow be wrong? But on the other hand, should they have full human rights, a
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Someone else points out this could increase the spread of disease from animals to humans for a start. Additionally how ethical is it to create something potentially intelligent, and then have it suffer in a lab all its life?
These things are not black and white. Even within religious circles. What we (regardless of belief system) need to start looking at is what consequences do our actions have. If you choose to call it "bad", "evil", "increasing suffering" or even "threatening our continued survival as a s
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exactly my point. there is not ethics, people! just science, and discovery! imagine what we'd have accomplished by now if not for this squeamish paranoia!
Rise of the Planet of the Apes opens this weekend. (Score:2)
Easy way to control this (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Easy way to control this (Score:5, Informative)
On the other hand, is there a problem if one would create e.g. the equivalent of a geep (a sheep-goat chimera, really two distinctive cell lines constituting different parts of the same body) from chimp and human lines? I would definitely think so. The tipping point is not too clear, and that's really the problem here. "Any creature with human DNA" is far too broad, so what criterion should we use.
Re:Easy way to control this (Score:5, Informative)
While horizontal gene transfer, in nature, doesn't seem to be as common in large eukaryotes as it is in bacteria, there are trillions and trillions of viruses out there, and sometimes they are sloppy. You definitely contain nontrivial amounts of their DNA, some of them might have acquired a few little bits of you...
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So I can create an army of slugs with voting rights just by mixing in some human DNA? If I use dogs instead can we count in "dog years" for reaching voting age?
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So let's create an army of dog-children. Unfortunately, what if they don't vote as you tell them to. That, and if your opponent releases a squirrel at the voting precinct, would foil your evil plans.
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Giving human rights to constructs that have some human DNA would needlessly complicate a whole slew of matters. It also doesn't resolve things as clearly as you think it might: e.g. comatose or terminal humans certainly have human DNA, yet there is lively debate about how far their rights extend and whether we should keep them alive at all costs or let them die. Unborn embryo and fetuses have human DNA; and again society hasn't decided how many human rights they ought to have. A sev
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For better or worse, research will simply take place in whatever jurisdiction doesn't pass those laws.
The dotted line we draw around humanity is, ultimately, an arbitrary choice. There was a time not long ago where the definition of "person" excluded whole races and whole genders. And even though we have a person good grasp of how far to extend the shield of our empathy and citizenship, there are still people pushing the boundary further (animal welfare, the great ape project, etc).
Chimeras and geneticall
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That would grant excessive political power to zoofiles.
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Pass laws that any creature with human DNA is human and has the same rights as any other human. Have the law make those who create such creatures be financially responsible for them until such time as they can be demonstrated to be able to care for themselves.
This would never pass as we can't even get people to treat those that have 100% human DNA as human (see abortion issue).
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So mice with, say, humanized breast tissue used as tumor models have the same rights as humans?
Yeah, makes perfect sense.
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As long as (Score:5, Funny)
As long as I can get a cat that will tell me exactly what it wants instead of me having to figure it out, I'm good.
Then they can apply that gene to women.
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As long as I can get a cat that will tell me exactly what it wants instead of me having to figure it out, I'm good.
Then they can apply that gene to women.
That's easy. But there's one fatal flaw to this idea. In order to give women the ability to just tell people what they want, you have to insert a Y chromosome. Trouble is, that turns them into a man.
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What cats want. (Score:4, Funny)
I need ... (Score:2)
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What? They said sticking human DNA in animals! They never said anything about sticking octopus DNA in your forehead!
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They said sticking human DNA in animals!
Oh Noes! Cats with Hands [catswithhands.com]! I shudder at the very thought.
Now you've gone an done it (Score:2)
http://www.lolpark.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/Human-Animal-Funny-Photo.jpg [lolpark.com]
Language! (Score:2)
Memory is not the real issue
Surely one cell is not too controversial. Two... maybe a little. But o
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As for birds, parrots and myna birds can already mimic human speech. They might not understand grammar as you say, but they can say "stop" just as surely as a hypothetical parahuman rat could.
Cool - I always wanted fur (Score:2)
Oblig Simpsons Quote (Score:3)
God-schmod. I want my monkey man!
What we need are all possible hybrids (Score:2)
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I think people should be free to alter themselves and their children with impunity. What I'm worried about is crossover of more disease from animals to people as a result of this work.
Re:Welcome to the future, get your vaccine! (Score:5, Interesting)
If Slashdot had circles, I would add you to one called "fruitbat".
There are no indigenous vegetarians, let alone vegans.
If you're using your spine properly, you don't need any adjustments. Try Tai Chi.
Live naturally, that doesn't include chiropractic care! Enjoy your nasty, brutish, and short life. The last people to naturally live over a hundred years on a regular basis failed to develop their technology (this was the cost of their lifestyle) and were essentially wiped out.
Or put another way, if we were made, we were obviously made to wage war, among the other things. So by extension, all the funky food and TV watching is also natural.
In summary: I find your theories laughable, and I wish to pee on your newsletter
indigenous vegans (Score:2)
"There are no indigenous vegetarians, let alone vegans."
We can not be sure there are no indigenous Vegans, the star is 26 light years away..
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I respond to trolls when I want to, and don't when I don't. In this case I had something to say, so I said it. Sometimes I speak to the troll, sometimes I just babble. I'm here for fun! Slashdot is my favorite MMORPG.
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There are no indigenous vegetarians, let alone vegans.
that does not make any sense. many communities in the world eat complete vegetarian.
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Which ones?
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Re:Welcome to the future, get your vaccine! (Score:4, Funny)
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Actually, I like chiropractors who realize they are body mechanics. But in general we get into these problems because we are using our bodies in ways for which we have not prepared. Accidents happen so I don't want to kill all the chiropractors. I went to one (I think her name was Marie Cafasso but maybe I'm confusing her with some other Chiropractor in Santa Cruz County) who was really great. And then I went to one in Lakeport (P.Q.) who was a completely useless leech who did not even bother to address my
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Even if you want to take this biblically, you have the epitome of arrogance in assuming you have any inkling of the purpose, and forcing your views filtered by your observational organs and perceptions, upon others.
If you assume we were made by God, then it fits that God made us with one unique ability of all the creatures, what differentiates us more than anything else - the ability to drastically modify both ourselves and our environments, without having to wait for any kind of natural genetic shuffling.
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Whatcha gonna do with all that junk, all that junk inside his trunks?
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Why is it on Slashdot that every time someone mentions cross-species genetic experiments, the example that many people choose is human-goat?
I wonder what Freud would have to say about that. :-)
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"This is the same line of thinking that leads to outlawing cloning, which ironically, happens every time twins are born."
The problem is when humans do the cloning, the clone has very short lifespan.
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it would improve rapidly if experiments were allowed to occur.