Friday, March 19, 2021

Embryonic testing





Human embryos are people, and should be treated as such


ANTHONY FISHER


Science is wonderful, but we must beware those who wish to make early human life expendable

This week the media celebrated the achievement by Monash University scientists of so-called “model human embryos”, or “artificial human embryos”.

There was unadulterated excitement about another Aussie first in the field. It promises to be a cure for infertility, miscarriage, you name it. And it all happened, we were assured, “by accident”.

But hold on. Even if we take at face value that this was “accidental”, does anyone really believe it was unexpected? Or unlikely? Haven’t Monash researchers been experimenting on early human life for decades, pushing the boundaries on what is technologically possible and legally permissible?

Accident or not, is this really such a good thing? Remember when embryonic stem-cells were going to cure almost anything, as long as enough restrictions on human embryo experimentation were removed, and enough government money was thrown at them? Two decades later, there are no such cures. Indeed, the majority of the licences granted went not to those institutions researching cures for disease or spinal cord injuries, as promised, but to the IVF industry that pulls in revenues of half a billion dollars each year in Australia alone.

Remember when gene therapy was going to be the panacea, as long as there were no legal or ethical constraints? There’s not much to show for these promises either. So we should dial down expectations that artificial embryos will cure disease or alleviate suffering.

Thirdly, it’s interesting that although the Embryo Research Licensing Committee says these are human embryos, the researchers are saying they are “not really” and calling them names like “iBlastoids”. Is this label just a matter of convenience, masking legitimate questions about their identity and making them sound more like the latest Apple product and less than a human being worthy of respect or protection?

As the saying goes: “If it looks like a duck, swims like a duck, and quacks like a duck, it’s probably a duck.” So, too, with an embryo: if it has human genes, develops as a human being develops, and does the things a human embryo does, it’s probably an embryonic human.

Nature already provides for a significant variance in early human development. Those human embryos that do not develop exactly as expected because of some chromosomal abnormality or other genetic issue are still embryonic human beings, and it would be outrageous for anyone to suggest these were not human, just because their development did not appear “normal”. Until we know for certain, we must give these embryonic human beings the benefit of the doubt.

Fourthly, if these organisms do not have such a developmental trajectory, then they might not be bona fide embryos after all. In that case there might be ethical uses for them, and we would support and encourage such ethical use. That’s why for two decades now, the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney has funded competitive research into the therapeutic potential of stem cells that are not human embryos, nor derived from human embryos, and perfectly ethical.

Fifthly, if these organisms are human embryos, they deserve the respect owed to early human lives. We should be suspicious of those who rush to characterise them as no embryo at all, particularly when they stand to benefit from this type of dehumanisation. This could just be an Orwellian way of ensuring no one feels too queasy about the laboratory manufacture of human lives for experimental purposes, or that no one engages in much scrutiny of the project.

Some people evidently think Ethics is a place in England. Or that ethics are optional when results, profits or prizes are in view. Or that everything that can be done should be done and inevitably will be done. Researchers are already pushing to lift the period for experimentation on early human life beyond the 14-day limit. Others think this sort of thing is playing god — or playing the devil — and just plain bad.

But we don’t have to presume the best or worst of the embryo experimenters to be sceptical about the breathless celebration of every Aussie first in this arena, or call for caution while more investigation is done. We should all take a deep breath and ask: what’s the moral cost and where is this taking us?

Has the ready expendability of early human life now become an acceptable social norm?

Archbishop Anthony Fisher is the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney and holds a doctorate in bioethics from the University of Oxford.


Some people evidently think that Ethics is a place in England

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