Posted on 04/10/2013 5:16:55 PM PDT by Morgana
Two Australian ethicists created a firestorm of controversy last year when they argued for after-birth abortions. Another Australian ethicist has taken up their torch, gleefully celebrating the idea of designer humans and in vitro eugenics.
A series of recent scientific results suggest that, in the not-too-distant future, it will be possible to create viable human gametes from human stem cells. This paper discusses the potential of this technology to make possible what I call in vitro eugenics: the deliberate breeding of human beings in vitro by fusing sperm and egg derived from different stem-cell lines to create an embryo and then deriving new gametes from stem cells derived from that embryo. Repeated iterations of this process would allow scientists to proceed through multiple human generations in the laboratory. In vitro eugenics might be used to study the heredity of genetic disorders and to produce cell lines of a desired character for medical applications. More controversially, it might also function as a powerful technology of human enhancement by allowing researchers to use all the techniques of selective breeding to produce individuals with a desired genotype.
A series of recent scientific results suggest that, in the not-too-distant future, it will be possible to create viable human gametes from human stem cells.15 i Should this turn out to be the case, it will dramatically expand the number and type of individualsand combinations of individualsfor whom reproduction will be possible and will consequently require a concerted effort to extend and revise current accounts of the ethics of reproduction. Some of this intellectual work has already begun, with philosophers and bioethicists discussing the ethics of posthumous and same-sex genetic parenthood with renewed enthusiasm. However, the development of a technology of in vitro gametogenesis would also make possible other technological interventions into human reproduction, which as yet have barely been discussed at all. In particular, it might allow what I will call in vitro eugenics: the deliberate breeding of human beings in vitro by fusing sperm and egg derived from different stem-cell lines to create an embryo and then deriving new gametes from stem cells derived from that embryo, which in turn might be used in the creation of another embryo. Repeated iterations of this process would allow scientists to proceed through multiple human generations in the lab.ii In vitro eugenics might be used to study the heredity of genetic disorders and to produce cell lines of a desired character for medical applications. More controversially, it might also function as a powerful technology of human enhancement by allowing researchers to use all the techniques of selective breeding to produce human individuals with a desired genotype. This paper aims to draw the attention of other scholars to this dramatic andto some, at leastpotentially disturbing new technological possibility.
So hey, maybe one day parents can design their own babies! They can pick the gender, the hair color, eye color, and IQ, and make sure that their spawn has only desirable genetic traits. Itll be like a real-life Gattaca! Of course, there used to be a time when creating little Frankenstein monsters would make a good horror story. Now, its something that excites ethicists.
And why shouldnt we take that next step? We already practice eugenics through abortion. Babies diagnosed with any kind of disability are overwhelmingly likely to be killed. Sex-selective abortions are on the rise around the world. It would be a lot easier to just take care of those messy issues in a little test tube, wouldnt it? Never mind the humanity that it robs from us and our future generations. Never mind the potential consequences that may arise from tinkering with human genetics. Never mind that this very idea makes the argument that only certain kind of lives are valuable people with diseases or disabilities dont deserve to live. And what happens when a baby is born with the wrong results? Maybe thats when the the after-birth abortions can come into play.
The entire idea of making little designer humans and practicing in vitro eugenics is ghoulish and disgusting. Most disturbing of all is that this is what passes for ethics in some medical circles.
And so, eugenics returns. Despicable Mengele science in action. God has ways of punishing those who attempt to become gods themselves.
The Nazis would be so proud.
Whoa - perfect looks, a perfect body, a tremendous IQ...no, it’d be a pretty boring world if everybody were like me.
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