From the Moreau Clinic
When it comes to the therapeutic applications of "chimeras," or human-animal hybrid embryos, I'm inclined to agree with Lindsay Beyestein's sentiment that making Leon Kass's head explode is a nice bonus on top of the medical promise of the research. The objections advanced in this article by various bioethicists strike me as not simply wrong, but obviously, stupidly wrong. Anyone who thinks potentially lifesaving research involving these embryonic hybrids should be foresworn because "It would deny that there is something distinctive and valuable about human beings that ought to be honored and protected," as though what's valuable about humans is the distinctiveness of the genome, is a special kind of moral imbecile. Thomas Paine's cutting comment in a different context is apt: "He pities the plumage, but forgets the dying bird."
That said, there are interesting ethical questions when it comes to the possibility—not yet seriously broached by any researchers, but likely to come up eventually—of bringing a "chimera" to term rather than simply destroying the embryo after a few days for research purposes. While I don't share some people's instinctive horror at the prospect, there's intuitively something wrong with deliberately bringing someone (assume one could create a chimera with something approximating human consciousness) into the world condemned to be a kind of ultimate outsider: The lone member of their species. That's even assuming one knew it could be gotten right, so to speak, and that the hybrid creature wouldn't just die of organ failure or some such thing at a young age.
But as Derek Parfit famously observed, when we attempt to consider cases like these by asking whose rights are violated or who is wronged, things get tricky. You initially want to say: "Well, the hybrid child, of course." Yet it's not as though the hybrid status is some kind of extra burden inflicted on some determinate, existing person. That is, we cannot say (as in the case of ordinary harms): "You made the child a hybrid zebra (or whatever), whereas he clearly would have been better off, had an easier go of it, as an ordinary human." That's because "he" would not have been at all: Any child, however genetically similar otherwise, with a fully human genome would have been a different person. Unless the child's life is literally worse than non-existence, then, it's hard to cash out the intuition that there's something wrong with doing this in the language of "harms" or "making the child worse off." A straight utilitarian analysis might seem to give the answer that comports with our intuitions in the instance—if a distinct but fully human child could have been created instead of the chimera, that would've been a state of affairs with greater net (and average) utility—but that raises a whole host of other thorny problems, which Parfit explores deftly in his seminal Reasons and Persons.
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I would agree that the argument of some loss of our genetic uniqueness is silly. I think the ability to do shit like this is what makes us unique.
Still, while I don't suffer from kneejerk "that's just wrong," I still feel this sort of jump needs some thought and consideration. I suppose I'm comfortable with that going on concurrently with the initial research into such things. The similar viral dangers to xenotransplantion first come to mind.
Interesting to note that the next step for Dr. Zhang's em-stemcell/motor neuron research mentioned in an earlier post, is that the next step is to implant them in chicken spinal cords.
How could a "chimera" possibly live a happy and fulfilling life, being the only member of its kind (assuming it has our level of consciousness)?
Like the elephant man, it would only know rejection and sadness, it seems.
andy,
That's certainly one possibility. But it could also not recognize it's uniqueness and live a happy and fulfilling life, perhaps limited to a certain institutional setting with only sympathetic researchers to interact with. Or perhaps there could be several made. Or maybe it's uniqueness would bring it fame, fortune and a good life.
There are too many unknown to be sure of an outcome.
What level of chimeraism is wrong. Is just having a pig heart bad? Is a human insulin creating bacteria a chimera. The line needs to be drawn because as we all know the first step after moral inspection is gov't regulation. Philosophically, it's hard to know how much of an outcast zebra boy would be. A lot of that would depend on how he looks. Obviously, he wouldn't fit in with zebras or humans and andy sounds about right bringing up the elephant man. Best case scenario is that he hangs out with 100% human freaks or travels with a circus and leads a fulfilling life traveling (he could probably get a great gig in Vegas).
Heck, assuming the process gets worked out, there will probably be more than one chimera and we could probably get them all to hang out on an island or something. I seem to remember a movie like that...
As long as we don't make any real versions of Nelson De La Rosa's charater. He was really creepy. Just keep an eye out for angry villagers with torches and pitchforks.
I am at least 50% not an animal!
Sounds like a question for Bat Boy.
Now, if Zebra Boy were hung like a horse maybe he wouldn't be unhappy at all.
I'm not saying arguments should always be taken to a logical extreme, and I agree with your larger sentiment on the issue Julian, but if one extends your argument, it would seem I'm doing something wrong everytime I jizz into a condom instead of the unprotected twat. The would-be child might not have a good life when I split town, but being a bastard is better then non-existence, right?
Sperm are only haploid, not diploid. The sin of Onan may be a biblical nono, but as actually being a potential child, it's merely one key ingredient. The folks who wrote the bible didn't understand genetics , so they didn't see the equivalence (in kind, not degree obviuosly) between menstration and onanism. Both are wasting haploid cells, but a unique genetic combo has yet to be achieved.
I think the bioethics community needs to take a look at some of those Chicken Lady episodes from Kids in the Hall -- that should wrap up debate pretty quickly.
Now that steroids have been cleaned up in baseball, we may not see anyone break the single season HR record until Joe "Gorilla Arms" McDoogle does it in 2018.
Can I get a chimerical "sex pet"? Say, a being that looks like Anna Nicole Smith (lite version) but that has the brain of a golden retriever?
Oops, they already did that one. OK, one that looks like Salma Hayek, then.
Don't forget Douglas Adams' "Restaurant at the End of the Universe" 'Meet the Meat' idea.
Where the meat is a creature that not only WANTS but explicitly ASKS to be eaten.
It seems to me that the basic question is, "What is a human being?"
The next question is, "Do human beings possess fundamental rights?"
And then, "Do ONLY human beings possess fundamental rights?"
There are no "right" answers. Yet, how we answer these questions determines our stand on everything from in vitro fertilisation to abortion to slavery to capital punishment.
...a special kind of moral imbecile.
Oh, I'm not so sure. Just because one assents to a different definition - to different answers - does not make one an imbecile.