
The following sources do not necessarily reflect the Center's position
and, likewise, may or may not be consistent with a biblical worldview. These sources, however, are
excellent resources for familiarizing oneself with the all sides of the issue.
Cameron, Nigel M. de S. (ed.), with Foreword by Sir John Peel. Embryos and
Ethics: The Warnock Report in Debate. KCVO. Edinburgh: Rutherford
House, 1987. 122 pages.
In this book, writers who ascribe to the Judeo-Christian philosophical and
moral foundations of traditional western medical practice critically assess
the way key issues were or were not addressed in Dame Mary Warnock's Report
of the Committee of Inquiry into Human Fertilisation and Embryology,
published by the government (London, H.M.S.O.) in 1984. Their analyses in
this early report prefigure current critical lines of inquiry.
In "The Christian Stake in the Warnock Debate," Nigel M. de S. Cameron
attributes the furor raised by the report (which came with three appended
dissents) to its failure to face the central issue of using human embryos for
research purposes, as well as to its "compromise" permitting experimental use
of embryos up to 14 days after fertilization. The underlying question of the
nature of the human embryo was never asked, making it impossible to offer
principled considerations of how such embryos should be treated.
Several essays challenge Peter Singer and colleagues' concept of speciesism
and their focus on the embryo's capacity to display "morally relevant
characteristics" over against any ascription of inherent human dignity. In
pointing out how the view of Singer and his colleagues contradicts the
Christian doctrine of the creation of human beings, Cameron considers
questions of potentiality, the image of God, and the incarnation. In two
essays, Teresa Iglesias looks at notions of potentiality/development and
challenges the reliance on utilitarian thinking, which she notes is not the
only way to evaluate moral and social problems. Iglesias asks theologians to
consider what doctrinal development may be necessary to correct the
suggestion, often based on Greek philosophy, that the soul gets "added on" at
a later point in development. She notes that, for Christians, "truths of
faith are not human achievements as philosophical doctrines are."
Richard Higginson examines the ethics of nontherapeutic experimentation in
light of international conventions and explores possible applications to
human fetuses, with a look at the work of Paul Ramsey, Richard McCormick, and
other theologians on the issue of experimentation on children. While
upholding Christian considerations, which he points out bolster his belief
that the embryo is a human person, he emphasizes other arguments based on
natural justice that he believes will be persuasive to a broad group of
people. In a second essay, Higginson warns of risks to both "childless
couples and rootless children" in rushing into artificial reproduction too
quickly. David Atkinson presents a theological account of the human embryo's
status by invoking biblical themes such as the story of the Flood, the
prohibition of destroying innocent human life, the meaning of the imago Dei,
generalizations from Psalm 139, the virginal conception of Jesus, parenthood,
and souls. Ian Donald sharply critiques the Warnock report's main assertions,
warning against beguiling language that veils what the prophet Jeremiah
described as "broken cisterns that can hold no water," hewed out by those who
have rejected God. He catalogs practical problems likely to result from
efforts to implement the report's recommendations. Isobel Grigor examines
what the responses of various denominations, particularly those based in
Scotland, indicate about how churches have performed as witnesses and
advocates of the Christian faith. Observing that the Anglican and Methodist
churches differ from the Scottish churches in accepting the 14-day cut-off,
she urges all churches to work on discussing and clarifying the issues within
their denominations. In "After the Embryo the Fetus?" John Peel chastises the
profession for its erosion of discipline and questions whether the 14-day
cut-off point will hold, noting that it has no real scientific, moral, or
practical basis. In "A View from the Other End," George L. Chalmers comments
on the nebulous concepts, undefined terms, and weak arguments that have
replaced simple and direct principles of morality. He likens the Warnock
Report to the Tower of Babel, which failed because it was contrary to the law
and purposes of God, as well as to the eternal law of love.
Carrier, E. & G. Ledingham.
100 Questions & Answers About Bone Marrow and Stem Cell Transplantation . Sudbury, MA:
Jones and Bartlett, 2004.
Green, Ronald M.
The Human Embryo Research Debates: Bioethics in the Vortex of Controversy . Oxford University Press, 2001. 231 pages.
The author, a professor of ethics in a university department of religion,
draws on his experience as a member of the 1994 NIH (National Institutes of
Health) Human Embryo Research Panel to make the case for federally funded
human embryo research and to counter the arguments of religious groups
opposed to such research. (The NIH panel's recommendations were undercut by
politics and ultimately superseded by the work of the National Bioethics
Advisory Commission (NBAC), established by President Clinton in February
1997.) Detailed chronological accounts of the social forces and opposition
groups following specific scientific breakthroughs, as well as philosophical
reflections on the subject matter, are provided. Extensive endnotes, a
bibliography, two appendices, and a three-level index make the work a
valuable reference tool, despite strident objections to religious groups and
individuals who are opposed to human embryo research. In an "Afterword" added
as the book was about to go to press, the author notes his acceptance of an
invitation to chair an ethics advisory board for Advanced Cell Technology
(ACT), a biotechnology company that has announced its intention to clone
human beings.
Green sharply criticizes the search for "objective markers" in debate over
moral status, personhood, and related concepts, arguing that "biology
involves continuous processes rather than events" and that determinations of
defining points are made solely through value-based decisions. Faced with the
NIH panel's charge to identify criteria for when to allow federally funded
research on the human embryo, Green called for a "pluralistic and pragmatic"
approach using multiple criteria (such as "developmental potential,"
"semblance of human bodily form," "some degree of developed cognitive
ability," and "independent existence") together to assign relative moral
weight. Language chosen to finesse the controversial matter of creating
embryos solely for research purposes appeared in the panel's report as
"fertilization of oocytes expressly for research purposes" and "developing
research embryos" (rather than "using spare embryos").
The interplay of Congressional and federal health agency politics, new
administrations with new personnel, and the cloning of Dolly the sheep
through somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) shaped the development and
outcome of NBAC's reports. Comparing this group with the NIH panel (while
acknowledging his partiality), the author judges NBAC's handling of the
cloning issue in its first report (1997) to be "a case study in poorly
conducted public bioethics," both in process and substance, and finds that
the deficiencies carried over to the Commission's final report on stem cell
research (1999). He argues that NBAC should have rejected the assignment to
rush out a report on such complex scientific and technological developments
and, furthermore, that it should not have given such a high profile to
religious views in invited testimony and written reports. Green predicts that
evangelical Christian groups, who apparently were not invited to speak, will
not long tolerate exclusion, and he foresees future hearings growing into
"larger cultural wars." Also harmful, asserts the author, were NBAC's
recommendation to prohibit both public and private attempts at human cloning
(which "introduced a dangerous new precedent to federal efforts to control
life sciences research") and its decision not to make any recommendations
about human embryo research as related to cloning. Green suggests that in
trying to sidestep political controversy over embryo research, the NBAC
failed to follow through on its professed concern about the risk of harming
children. Such concern requires new thinking and a deliberate choice of
"points at which moral protection begins and ends." In conclusion, Green
holds that federally funded health-related research should not be classified
"as discretionary and unrelated to the fundamental rights of citizens" and
that no research should be obstructed on the basis of "majority whim or
minority pressure." Religious and moral objections "must be set aside" unless
they can be "grounded in concerns appropriate to a pluralistic democracy" and
"reasonably clear issues of public health and safety."
Holland, Suzanne, Karen Lebacqz, and Laurie Zoloth (eds).
The Human Embryonic Stem Cell Debate: Science, Ethics, and Public Policy . Cambridge, MA
and London: A Bradford Book, The MIT Press, 2001. 257 pages.
This compilation of original essays and excerpted or adapted reports and
testimonies illustrates the issues raised by stem cell research and the way
they are argued, mainly from the perspectives of individuals already engaged
in the research as scientists or ethics consultants. The introduction
identifies key players in the debate as well as the major regulatory and
funding hurdles that have been encountered. Twenty chapters are organized
under four major sections--"The Science and Background of Human Embryonic Stem
Cells," "Raising the Ethical Issues," "Angles of Vision" (which includes
various religious perspectives), and "Public Discourse, Oversight, and the
Role of Research in Society." A brief glossary and a detailed index are also
included.
The religious views included in this book tend to support embryonic stem cell
research, thereby emphasizing alternative rather than formal or official
rationales (as is the case with all three essays describing "Catholic"
perspectives). The positions of many religious groups known to avidly oppose
stem cell research are not represented. Nevertheless, those opposed to this
research on religious grounds will likely find the book to be valuable
because of its authoritative insider accounts of how various individuals and
groups have addressed issues such as the status of the human embryo and
whether it should be protected against destruction, the limits of scientific
inquiry, the meaning of "respect" (as upheld by the National Bioethics
Advisory Commission (NBAC)), the concept of "dignity" (as upheld by
organizations such as Do No Harm: Coalition of Americans for Research
Ethics), and the consent process for women and couples donating "excess"
embryos for research. Critiques of NBAC's analysis, as well as of the
evidence offered in support of this research, are also included. In the
concluding chapter, editor Laurie Zoloth calls upon bioethics consultants to
ask moral questions first before engaging in research as a means of warding
off the reactive legal maneuvering and justification that often ensues.
Humber, JM & RF Almeder.
Stem Cell Research .
Totowa, NJ: Humana Press, 2004.
Juengst E, Fossel M. The ethics of embryonic
stem cells – now and forever, cells without end. Journal of the American
Medical Association 2004(284): 3175-3179.
Kass, Leon R.
Life, Liberty, and the Defense of Dignity: The Challenge for Bioethics . San Francisco: Encounter Books, 2002. 313 pages.
Leon Kass introduces his completed book at the end of 2001 upon having been
appointed to chair the new President's Council on Bioethics to monitor stem
cell research and consider the medical and ethical ramifications of
biomedical innovation. "Human nature itself lies on the operating table,
ready for alteration, for eugenic and neuropsychic 'enhancement,' for
wholesale redesign," and "for anyone who cares about preserving our humanity,
the time has come to pay attention," he warns.
Calling for a "richer bioethics," Kass offers a series of meditations to show
what we as humans stand to lose--and what we must defend--from the reductive
scientific-technological transformation of the meaning of humanity. The major
principles of professional bioethics are faulted for their narrow focus on
avoiding bodily harm, on patient autonomy and informed consent, and on equal
access, as such principles miss the possibility of "willing dehumanization."
Kass urges that our notion of human dignity move beyond the concept of
"personal dignity" to embrace a full and proper anthropology "that richly
understands what it means to be a human animal, in our bodily, psychic,
social, cultural, political, and spiritual dimensions."
The book's ten chapters are divided into three sections: "Nature and Purposes
of Technology and Ethics," "Ethical Challenges from Biotechnology," and
"Nature and Purposes of Biology." Specific topics include in vitro
fertilization, genetic screening and engineering, the Human Genome Project,
stem cell research and cloning, organ transplantation, and "immortality
research." Issues addressed include commerce and biotechnology,
commodification, health care costs, federal funding and regulation, assisted
suicide, euthanasia, abortion and the sanctity of life, family and lineage,
identity and individuality, care of the dying, and legal principles and
constitutional law.
Kass relates the grounding of human dignity to biblical, philosophical, and
natural law concepts and principles, arguing that the legitimacy of the
Bible's assertions about respect for innocent life and its prohibition of
murder does not rest on biblical authority alone but rather is inherent in
humanity and is proved whenever societies are set up under such laws. The
concluding chapter, "The Permanent Limitations of Biology," proposes that the
root of biology's failure to "do justice to human life" as it is actually
lived lies not in biotechnologies spawned by the "brave new biology" but in
the underlying scientific thought. Biology's chief defects include foolishly
pursuing limitless goals, proceeding by methods and concepts that impose
artificial boundaries that are not true to life, and falling unavoidably
under the limits posed by the deficiencies of human reason and by "the
mysteries of its subject, life itself." Specific philosophical tendencies
examined include reductionism, mechanistic models, Cartesian mind-body
dualism, and objectification. New currents of thinking that may serve to
redress biology's problems are also noted. "Biology may do some of its finest
work," concludes Kass, "when it is brought to acknowledge and affirm the
mysteries of the soul and the mysterious source of life, truth and goodness."
The President's Council on Bioethics.
Human Cloning and Human Dignity: The Report of the President's Council on Bioethics . Washington: Public Affairs, October 2002. 400 pages.
Online:
http://www.bioethics.gov/reports/cloningreport/index.html.
This is the first report of the President's
Council on Bioethics (PCBE), formally established by President Bush on
November 28, 2001 (and originally announced in August 2001), to advise the
President on bioethical issues related to advances in biomedical science and
technology. In his Letter of Transmittal to the President (July 10, 2002),
Council Chair Leon R. Kass, M.D., Ph.D., stresses an intention to illuminate,
not suppress, differences. Describing the report's disciplinary scope, Kass
explains that "we have eschewed a thin utilitarian calculus of costs and
benefits, or a narrow analysis based only on individual 'rights'" and instead
"have grounded our reflections on the broader plane of human procreation and
human healing, with their deeper meanings." Cloning is portrayed as "a
turning point in human history--the crossing of an important line separating
sexual from asexual procreation and the first step toward genetic control
over the next generation."
While Council members remained divided on ethical conclusions and
recommendations, they unanimously concluded that the entire report presented
a fair and accurate reflection of their individual views and the reasons for
them. The report offers three chief findings:
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First (unanimous): Cloning-to-produce-children (so-called reproductive
cloning) is unethical, ought not to be attempted, and should be indefinitely
banned by federal law, regardless of who performs the act or whether federal
funds are involved.
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Second: On the ethics of cloning-for-biomedical-research (so-called
therapeutic cloning), the council is of several minds and is divided in its
policy preferences. Seven members (a minority) are eager to see the research
proceed and recommend that it go forward, but only under strict federal
regulation. Ten members (a majority) are convinced that no human cloning
should be permitted (at least for the time being) and recommend instituting
by law a four-year ban on cloning-for-biomedical-research, applicable to all
researchers regardless of whether federal funds are involved.
-
Third: The same ten-member majority recommends a federal review of current
and projected practices of human embryo research, preimplantation genetic
diagnosis, genetic modification of human embryos and gametes, and related
matters, with a view to recommending and shaping ethically sound policies for
the entire field.
The report's revised and standardized terminology, based on a clear
rationale, will be useful for all interested science and policy parties as
well as for the general public. To ensure fairness and accuracy, definitions
should be anchored in the act itself, not in its purpose or the technique
used to carry it out. In the case of embryonic stem cell research, for
instance, the terms "somatic cell nuclear transfer [SCNT] for stem cell
research," "nuclear transplantation for regenerative medicine" (or "to
produce stem cells"), and "therapeutic cloning" all miss the mark. Similarly,
distinguishing between the product of SCNT cloning ("blastocyst,"
"preimplantation clump of cells," "totipotent cell") and the product of
cloning-to-produce-children, in vitro fertilization, and natural reproduction
("human embryo") is dishonest. All of these processes, asserts the report,
produce a human embryo, and the ethical and moral issues should not be masked
by choice of language.
Religious positions are not addressed directly, but are touched on under
broader moral categories and are reflected in some individual statements.
Different concepts of "respect" and "dignity" are illuminated. The moral case
against cloning-for-biomedical-research, for instance, is based on the "moral
status of the cloned embryo," "exploitation of developing human life," "moral
harm to society," and "what we owe the suffering." Proponents of this
position conclude: "As much as we wish to alleviate suffering now and to
leave our children a world where suffering can be more effectively relieved,
we also want to leave them a world in which we and they want to live--a world
that honors moral limits, that respects all life whether strong or weak, and
that refuses to secure the good of some human beings by sacrificing the lives
of others."
This report includes chapters on the meaning of human cloning, historical
aspects, terminology, scientific background, ethics, public policy options,
and policy recommendations. Also included are reviews of conclusions of
earlier federal and professional association reports, as well as a
bibliography, a glossary, and personal statements from 14 of the 17 council
members.
Mulkay M.
The Embryo Research Debate: Science and the Politics of Reproduction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997.
National Bioethics Advisory Commission.
Ethical Issues In Human Stem Cell Research . Rockville, MD: NBAC, 1999. Volume I: Report and Recommendations of
the National Bioethics Advisory Commission. Volume II: Commissioned Papers,
January 2000. Volume III: Religious Perspectives, June 2000. Statement By the
President, dated September 13, 1999. Available online:
www.georgetown.edu/research/nrcbl/nbac/pubs.html. Printed copy available from the U.S. Department of Commerce's National
Technical Information Service, Springfield, VA (www.ntis.gov).
The National Bioethics Advisory Commission (NBAC) was chartered by President
Clinton in 1995 to address ethical issues arising from biomedical and
behavioral research and to make recommendations to the President, the
National Science and Technology Council, and others. Its first report,
Cloning Human Beings, was quickly released in 1997 to address the new cloning
technique known as somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT). The Ethical Issues
in Human Stem Cell Research report was requested late in 1998 upon the
announcement that scientists had successfully derived and cultured in the
laboratory human pluripotent stem cells from embryos remaining after
infertility treatments and from aborted fetuses.
The report presents 13 recommendations advising that the existing statutes
and regulations be changed to allow federal funding of research involving the
derivation and use of human stem cells from aborted fetuses and from embryos
that would otherwise be discarded. The NBAC recommended that research
involving the derivation or use of stem cells from human embryos created
through SCNT not be eligible for federal funding at that time but that the
therapeutic potential, scientific progress, and medical utility of such
research be monitored closely.
Recommendation 8 called for creating a broad, multidisciplinary National Stem
Cell Oversight and Review Panel (to be chartered for not longer than five
years) to ensure conformance with the report's stated ethical principles and
recommendations. The NBAC's charter expired October 3, 2001, but its
recommendations and approach to reaching a consensus on stem cell research
continue to fuel debate and to shape federal and state legislative proposals.
The report summarizes ethical and policy considerations arising out of
diverse positions on how (and for some, whether) to afford human embryos
"respect as a form of human life," what such respect should entail, and what
level of protection is required at different stages of embryonic development.
Ten commissioned papers are drawn upon in this summary. Religious
perspectives are also presented through individual testimonies on Catholicism
(Kevin W. Wildes, Georgetown University; Edmund D. Pellegrino, Georgetown
University; Margaret Farley, Yale University); Judaism (Rabbi Elliot N. Dorff,
University of Judaism; Rabbi Moshe Tendler, Yeshiva University; Laurie Zoloth,
San Francisco State University); Eastern Orthodoxy (Father Demetrios
Demopulos, Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church); Islam (Abdulaziz Sachedina,
University of Virginia); and Protestantism (Gilbert C., Jr., Valparaiso
University; Nancy J. Duff, Princeton University Theological Seminary; Ronald
Cole-Turner, Pittsburgh Theological Seminary).
Potten CS, Robert
Clarke, James Wilson, Andrew Renehen, eds.
Tissue Stem Cells . Informa Healthcare, 2006.
Prentice, David A.
Stem Cells and Cloning . San Francisco: Benjamin Cummings,
2003. 39 pages.
This pamphlet explains the processes of stem cell research and cloning in
simple, layperson's language. It presents key terms in boldface type,
illustrates the various developmental stages with simple diagrams, and notes
relevant principles of and standards for scientific research. Clinical
studies are briefly reported upon, and a resources section lists the reports
of several national organizations, as well as bioethics centers and their web
sites. A section on bioethics asserts that the moral status of the human
embryo lies at the heart of the stem cell research debate and includes a
brief consideration of "what it means to be human." A section on politics
covers the current status of this research internationally as well as with
respect to U.S. federal and state legislation. The appearance of new
coalitions defying left-right stereotypes is also noted, demonstrating that
"the debate regarding the early embryo is not the abortion debate."
Robertson JA. Human
embryonic stem cell research: ethical and legal issues. Nature
Biotechnology 2002(2): 75-78.
Ruse, Michael and Christopher A. Pynes (eds.).
The Stem Cell Controversy: Debating the Issues. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 2003. 308 pages.
The editors of this book have brought together contributions from scientists,
clinicians, philosophers, theologians, historians, and policy analysts to
offer both the layperson and the professional a spectrum of different
perspectives and to suggest tools for engaging the issues. Included are a
12-page glossary and President George W. Bush's August 9, 2001 news release
announcing the formation of the President's Council on Bioethics. Eight of
the 25 contributions come from the stem cell report of the National Bioethics
Advisory Commission (NBAC) established by President Clinton (the charter for
which expired October 3, 2001).
The editors' general introduction reviews common religious and philosophical
schools of thought and how they are likely to shape the stem cell debate.
Each of the book's five sections--"The Science of Stem Cells," "Medical Cures
and Promises," "Moral Issues," "Religious Issues," and "Policy Issues"--leads
off with an identification of the key concepts.
The first section begins with a National Institutes of Health "Primer," which
casts doubt about the potential of adult stem cell research. The primer is
balanced with considerations from Jane Maienschein, who underscores the
importance of clarifying definitions, and Sidney Houff, who offers a positive
perspective on adult stem cell potential.
The four contributions on moral issues are 3 to 1 in favor of embryonic stem
cell research. Seven contributions on diverse religious perspectives, all
taken from testimony to the NBAC, do not claim to offer authoritative
statements representing official positions, although affiliation is
identified for five of them. Two contributions in this section present
patients' perspectives: a 16-year-old cancer patient whose life was saved by
cord blood research and who opposes embryonic stem cell research (as stated
in testimony to the NBAC), and the founding chairman of the Patients'
Coalition for Urgent Research (Patients' CURe).
Included in the five contributions on policy issues is the NBAC report's
conclusions and recommendations, which favored federal support for research
on stem cells derived from surplus embryos resulting from reproductive
technologies or obtained from aborted fetuses but which objected to the use
of embryonic stem cells from embryos made for research purposes. The other
four contributions in this section are split 2 to 2 on immediately proceeding
with research versus exercising caution or forgoing it at this time.
Shostak, Stanley.
Becoming Immortal: Combining Cloning and Stem-Cell Therapy .
State University of New York Press, 2002. 288 pages.
The author, a professor of biological sciences, wrote this book "to give the
possibility of immortalizing human beings a realistic face so that it would
be looked at seriously." Totally excluded from this book are any
considerations of the consequences of immortality for society, culture, or
bioethics. The author promotes a course of research leading to the
achievement of immortality as a feasible alternative to aging and death.
Separate chapters are devoted to explaining why human beings did not evolve
immortality and why at present we cannot develop it.
The possibility of biological immortality rests on two premises: (1) anyone
able to perpetually regenerate, reinvigorate, and replace aged or diseased
parts of their body could live in the same body from birth through eternity
with their persona intact; and (2) a clone of one's own cells could serve as
a source of embryonic stem cells able to support cellular renewal. Grafting a
clone to an embryo would create a permanent "generator" of embryonic stem
cells and thereby immortalize the host organism. Human beings could be made
immortal through the simple device of replacing germ cells with stem cells.
Such persons would be sterile and their bodies would remain permanently
prepubescent, but the stem cells would keep them perfectly balanced between
development and aging, between growth and decay.
As for the future, the author speculates that "human-machine synthesis" and
"cyborgian replacement therapy" will advance rapidly and that a
"human-machine lobby" will try to "dampen enthusiasm for immortality" but
that "the growth of an immortality lobby will ultimately overwhelm
resistance." An international scenario is envisioned with specific
organizations mobilizing to reduce population growth and prevent "domination
of immortality" by rich nations. Shostak advocates leaving the decision to
become immortal up to parents and concludes by considering the different
possible perspectives of non-immortals and immortals and the potential
conflicts between them.
Snow, NE, ed.
Stem Cell Research: New Frontiers in Science and Ethics . Notre Dame, IN:
University of Notre Dame Press, 2003.
Waters, Brent and Ronald Cole-Turner (eds.).
God and the Embryo: Religious Voices on Stem Cells and Cloning . Washington, DC: Georgetown University
Press, 2003. 228 pages.
The editors of this book have put together a collection of essays and
documents illustrating the sharp religious conflicts in the debate over human
embryonic stem cell research and cloning, with the intention of improving
understanding so that better ethics and policy may ensue. Readers can learn
of and compare particulars in the two-level index and eight appendices of
documents from specific religious organizations and groups, which reflect
official positions or formal statements of groups within the organization. A
ninth appendix contains the Executive Summary from the President's Council on
Bioethics report, Human Cloning and Human Dignity: An Ethical Inquiry.
In three essays in the first section, "Frameworks," the editors and Gene
Outka examine the impact of religious disagreement on science and research
and explore the appropriate contributions of religious communities to the
public debate. Specific concepts and arguments pertaining to the status of
the human embryo are critiqued in four essays in the second section,
"Embryos." Confessing his ambivalence on the prospect of embryonic research,
Brent Waters suggests asking a relational question, "Is the embryo my
neighbor?," to replace the abstract consideration, "Does the embryo have
moral status?" In a review of traditional Christian and Jewish thinking,
James C. Peterson observes an active "developmental tradition" among
Catholics that departs from the official teaching that the embryo is a human
being from the point of conception on. Ronald Cole-Turner compares the
principles and politics of the pro- and anti-research groups, concluding that
those who are opposed have stronger arguments but that their all-or-nothing
position on a ban (as opposed to limited regulation) could actually be judged
to show less respect for the embryo. Robert Song critically assesses "burden
of proof" issues in the face of doubt regarding the embryo's moral status,
pointing out that "to be willing to kill what for all one knows is a person
is to be willing to kill a person." Four essays in the final section,
"Research," assess the principles that determine research policy. Ted Peters
and Gaymon Bennett argue that the principle of beneficence trumps other
religious values, thereby concluding that research to benefit those afflicted
with disease should proceed. Weighing the goods and harms in light of the
complexity and uncertainty in embryonic research, Kevin T. Fitzgerald, S.J.,
comes down on the other side. He suggests that research using animal models
and non-embryonic human stem cells should instead be encouraged. In the face
of intractable discord over the status of the human blastocyst, Laurie Zoloth
calls for shifting the focus away from the embryo's moral status to a
consideration of the duties and limits that should govern bioethics. She
elaborates on six moral duties: justice, moral discernment, healing and
caring, tending and transforming, learning and studying, and solidarity and
community. Sondra Wheeler asks first that we "get our information straight"
and shows how clear language will facilitate discernment in both Jewish and
Christian thinking. She also points out the importance of a shared
theological anthropology in determining the meaning and purpose of life.
Wertz DC. Embryo and
stem cell research in the USA: a political history. Trends in
Molecular Medicine 2002(8): 143-146.
Additional Key Reports on Stem Cell Research
Stem Cells and the Future of Regenerative Medicine. Report of the National
Research Council/Institute of Medicine (NRC/IOM). Washington, DC: National
Academy Press, February 2002. 112 pages. Available online at
www.nap.edu/books/0309076307/html/. [Based on a June 22, 2001 workshop of
the joint NRC/IOM Committee on the Biological and Biomedical Applications of
Stem Cell Research.]
Scientific and Medical Aspects of Human Reproductive Cloning. Committee on
Science, Engineering and Public Policy; National Academy of Sciences;
National Academy of Engineering; Institute of Medicine. Washington, DC:
National Academy Press, February 2002. 296 pages. Available online at
www.nap.edu/books/0309076374/html/. [Based on August 7, 2001, workshop,
Committee on Science, Engineering and Public Policy (COSEPUP)/Board on Life
Sciences (BLS). COSEPUP is a joint committee of the National Academy of
Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medicine. The
project was approved by the Board on Life Sciences (BLS) of the National
Research Council (NRC)]
Stem Cell Research and Applications: Monitoring the Frontiers of Biomedical
Research. American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and
Institute for Civil Society (ICS). Audrey R. Chapman, Mark S. Frankel, and
Michele S. Garfinkel. Washington, DC: AAAS, November 1999. Available online
in pdf at
www.aaas.org/spp/sfrl/projects/stem/main.htm [51 pages online.]
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