(From various references)
The developmental geneticist Jerome Lejeune (1926-1994), discoverer of the chromosomal basis for Down’s Syndrome, stated:
“…each of us has a unique beginning, the moment of conception … As soon as the 23 chromosomes carried by the sperm encounter the 23 chromosomes carried by the ovum, the whole information necessary and sufficient to spell out all the characteristics of the new being is gathered … a new human being is defined which has never occurred before and will never occur again … [it] is not just simply a non-descript cell, or a ‘population’ or loose ‘collection’ of cells, but a very specialized individual …” (10).
Bavo, Susan!!! :clapping:
I’m going to copy that for use as a handout at Face the Truth and other pro-life activities.
Thanks,
Mimi
Dr. Kischer, emeritus professor of Anatomy at the University of Arizona, writes, “…the first thing learned in human embryology [is] that the life of the new individual human being begins at fertilization (conception)” (11). He continues, “we should respect a microscopic human embryo because at that time it is an integrated whole organism, just as the human is at every moment in time until death. Every human embryo deserves as much respect as you or I because it is formed as a new individual human life within the continuum of life …” To deny this, Kischer says, is “a trivialization and corruption of the science of human embryology.”
“The birth of a human life really occurs at the moment the mother’s egg cell is fertilized by one of the father’s sperm cells.” (Life Magazine, April 30, 1965).
It is a scientific fact that at the moment of conception a brand new human being begins. Although tiny, he or she is genetically distinct and separate from his or her mother.
On Day 1: Genetic make-up of the unborn child is already determined (e.g. sex, eye color, hair color, etc.). The only changes are in location. The fertilized egg now moves on through the fallopian tube and implants itself in the lining of the uterus, known as the endometrium (within first 7 days). All that is needed is time and nourishment.
There is no point from fertilization until death when, biologically, the human nature of that human being is altered. That human being continuously creates specifically human enzymes and, once formed, is on a path to grow and develop in the natural course of human growth. As we’ve said, all he or she needs is nutrition and a warm place to grow.