Posted on 12/04/2008 1:37:22 PM PST by NYer
Almost anyone with a high school education can correctly answer the question When does human life begin? by responding at conception or at fertilization of a human egg by a sperm cell. While we may not understand, or only vaguely recall, the precise process by which an egg and sperm combine to create a new unique human being, this basic truth about human life falls into the category of things we cant not know.
Yet today, many educated people who do know better assert that human life begins at some later stage of development.
They arbitrarily push forward the starting point to implantation or viability, or even birth and beyond, to accommodate their approval of abortifacient drugs and devices, in vitro fertilization (IVF) procedures, lethal embryo research (including embryonic stem-cell research), chemical and surgical abortion, and eugenic infanticide.
Because such confusion arises more from muddled values than a misunderstanding of basic science, one might think that the white paper When Does Human Life Begin?: A Scientific Perspective would have limited usefulness. To the contrary, the Westchester Institute for Ethics and the Human Person in Thornwood, N.Y., has done a great service to the public debate and to policymakers by publishing such a paper, authored by Maureen Condic, associate professor of neurobiology and anatomy at the University of Utah School of Medicine.
Based on her objective review of current scientific evidence in human embryology, Condic convincingly demonstrates that a new human organism (an embryo that is called a zygote in its one-celled form) comes into being at the moment when the sperm and egg fuse. This occurs mere seconds after the sperm has penetrated the thin layer of protein enveloping the egg.
Her evidence refutes the recent assertions of some scientists that a human life begins at the eight-cell stage when gene transcription begins, or four days post-fertilization when the inner cell mass forms distinct from placental cells, or at 5 to 6 days when the embryo implants in the uterine wall. Condic demonstrates that each of these events like a babys first tooth or the onset of puberty are simply milestones along lifes path and not indicative of any fundamental change in the entity.
And her proof also counters the claim of some scientists (reflected in many textbooks and even legal codes) that a human organism begins to exist only at syngamy, an event that occurs roughly 24 hours after the sperm enters the egg.
Recall that every cell has a nucleus where the cells DNA is located. A thin membrane separates the nucleus from the rest of the cell (cytoplasm). In a new human embryo, however, there are briefly two nuclei one with dads DNA and one with moms. Before the first cell division takes place, the DNA from mom and dad (23 chromosomes each) have to match up and copy themselves.
To do that, the membranes surrounding their nuclei need to break down. That event is called syngamy.
Condic shows how the zygote is already behaving like an organism before syngamy because factors from the sperm and egg are interact[ing] coordinately to orchestrate subsequent development. The zygote already possesses DNA different from his or her mother and father and is carry[ing] on the activities of life with organs that are separate but mutually dependent.
For example, within minutes after the sperm enters the cytoplasm of the egg, the new zygote sends out chemical signals that change the outer protein layer to prevent other sperm from entering the zygote.
Within 30 minutes of the sperm entering the egg, factors contributed by the sperm signal the nucleus of the egg to reduce its two sets of DNA to one. Within the first hour, proteins contributed by the sperm interact with chemicals in the zygote to create changes that will allow the zygote to begin dividing and growing. The nuclei are already being directed to line up across from each other for the first cell division.
Also, as Condic notes, the breakdown of the membranes separating the nuclei from the sperm and egg is not a unique, zygote-forming event, but rather it is part of every round of cell division that occurs through life.
In this summary form Ive just given, it may be difficult to follow the complex interplay of paternal and maternal factors within the newly formed zygote. Fortunately, Condic takes pains to walk us through these first essential baby steps of every new human life. The white paper also contains illustrations and a very helpful glossary to aid in understanding these intricate processes.
Writing as a scientist, Condic criticizes analogies comparing the development of human embryos to manufactured products, even when the embryos lives begin in a laboratory. Conceptualizing human procreation as a manufacturing process encourages erroneous thinking that the human being does not fully exist until viability or birth, when all the steps of the manufacturing process presumably are completed in the case of a car, when it is fully assembled and ready to leave the factory.
But cars, unlike people, are built externally by others acting on them, building and assembling components. In contrast, she explains, the defining feature of the human zygote is that it has the power both to generate all the cells of the body and simultaneously to organize those cells into coherent, interacting bodily structures. Thus, from the first moment of fusion between sperm and egg, everything necessary to develop the adult human being is present, provided the new human embryo is allowed to develop in a safe environment and is able to access nutrition.
When Does Human Life Begin comes at a critical time. The new administration and many members of the next Congress are already championing policies that will put nascent human lives at even greater risk than they are today.
Federal funding and a vast expansion of human embryonic stem-cell research is almost a foregone conclusion. Our next president strongly supports such funding, and he can reverse the Bush moratorium with an executive order.
The president-elect also has cosponsored legislation to greatly increase government funding of contraception, including abortifacients, and mandate contraceptive coverage in health insurance policies.
Annually, over 100,000 children are born in the United States as a result of assisted reproductive technologies. Most people are unaware that in the process of making these children, hundreds of thousands of sibling-embryos die or are killed.
In addition, President-elect Obama has promised Planned Parenthood that his first act as president will be to sign the Freedom of Choice Act (FOCA), a law that will effectively wipe out 35 years of pro-life laws at the state and federal levels. Many of these laws have been shown to reduce abortions and, in their absence, we can expect abortion rates to increase.
Many Americans are weary of political battles and deeply concerned about the economy and other issues that touch their families. But we cannot turn a blind eye to the legalized killing thats occurring in our country on an unprecedented scale. What lofty ideal does America still represent when its foundational principle the inherent, God-given right to life of every human being is violated by the very institutions entrusted with caring for the lives of vulnerable people: the family, the medical profession and the state?
We must urgently convey to our fellow citizens the inherent value and dignity of every human being. From the first moment of conception to ones natural death, every human being, regardless of size, age, sex, race, mental or physical ability, is a unique and irreplaceable creature, made in Gods image and infinitely loved by God. Every life is, therefore, worthy of protection and concern. There are no exceptions. Laws that tolerate exceptions are unjust and must be opposed.
Condic and the Westchester Institute are to be applauded for rigorously defining the beginning point of each human life from the perspective of science. The white paper should prove to be an excellent tool in our pro-life arsenal to refute claims that entities destroyed by abortifacients, destructive embryo research, IVF procedures, and abortions are something less than fully human beings.
What is it you don't like about that question? We investigate the death of any child if there's any possibility that it may have been the result of negligence or abuse. Drugs like RU486 chemically induce abortion that appears to be a miscarriage.
Are you going to argue that a woman taking such a drug would constitute murder, but it would be wrong to investigate whether that's what happened?
The sentiment, that life is about screwing but never about babies, is quite common. I thought that was your point, rather than a misphrasing of the basic statement about life.
My mistake, you get three chuckles and a Guinness, if you’re in the mood to imbibe.
Life begins at conceptionNOT birth. Birth is one day in the life of a person who is already nine months old. |
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I keep trying to convince my hairdressers of that and they insist on taking off three more inches than I ask.
No. Every embryo is a unique human being dependent on his or her mother for life. The rest is up to God, no matter the age of the mother. That doesn't matter, no matter what the secular world wants us to think.
Any kid who's ever bought a pack of rubbers knows when life begins. So does any girl who's ever worried about being five days late.
Of all phony issues, this one is the phoniest.
Brilliantly succinct. Kudos
Precisely.
Put any adult in the wild and they’re not likely to live on their own. Even “being able to live on its own” is a vague standard.
It might be comforting to think that it's just that simple, it's all good, and there can't be any unintended consequences, but I don't think it is.
That’s stupid thinking. A miscarriage is not deliberate murder or manslaughter or even accidental in the way manslaughter is sometimes defined.
There’s no intent to kill on the woman’s part when her body is reacting that way beyond her control.
The truth: Every embryo is a human being with potential.
Guinness should be the official beer of science. The “students” statistical t-test to determine if a difference between two groups is statistically significant was invented by a “student” at the Guinness Brewery who was asked to determine how to find an “odd” batch of Guinness in order to eliminate it.
Good brewing and good science! ;)
My hairdressers have the opposite problem: they don’t believe me when I say “Short, shorter, shortest!”
Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy. (That said, I prefer wine.)
“what amounts to recognition of citizenship at conception”
The U.S. Constitution says you are a citizen when you are born.
(from Article II)No person except a natural born Citizen, or a Citizen of the United States, at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President
(from Amendment 14)All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.
Theres no intent to kill on the womans part when her body is reacting that way beyond her control..
I said "apparent miscarraige". "Crib death" is not murder or manslaughter, and doesn't involve any intent to kill on part of the parents, either. But that death will still be investigated to be sure that's what happened.
Doctors are required to report evidence of child abuse to the police. If a doctor examines a woman and finds what appears to be evidence of a recent surgical abortion, what should he do?
If she has a miscarraige, and blood tests might show evidence of abortificant drugs, can he be required to run those tests and report the results to the police?
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