Hello Athiests!

  • Thread starter Thread starter josie_L
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
It really does not matter what kind of scientific testing is done on the tilma. There is no evidence it is the very same tilma and has not been replaced with numerous others over time. It’s never been in controlled conditions.
 
I was making a point about arguments for personhood starting at conception. To counter, you show ultrasounds of a fetus in the third trimester?

Firstly, you never stated what secular arguments pro-life atheists refer to. Secondly, by your definition a human is a person (how redundant!) when brain wave activity can be detected, which is around the 25th week of gestation, that being said, the purpose of those pictures I posted were to show you how a 17th week developing human has the behavioural characteristics one would find in an infant. So, my question is, do you truly think that this human (at 17 weeks) has no right to live (or be called a person) because brain wave activity cannot be detected?

Re-read my rationale for personhood, and you can see for yourself that it has nothing to do with “wanted”. You are using arguments against me commonly used against people with different positions.

I never said that you did. I was however demonstrating the hyprocrisy involved in determining the personhood/protection of a child in utero as was demonstrated in my previous post. If by law you can convict a person of double homicide in the death of a pregnant woman (in some cases only the unborn child dies) then by that very same law abortion should be viewed as murder.

No. The picture on the left is a baby human. The picture on the right is a bovine embryo.

Have we somehow established with these pictures that an infant does not go through an embryonic period of development?

Without analyzing the proteins or DNA, nobody can tell the difference between a human or bovine embryo. Is that what make a person a person? Molecular chemistry?

The difference between a human embryo and a bovine embryo is that one is a human and the other a cow. And that a human can only give birth to a human and a cow can only give birth to a cow. And that molecular chemistry no matter how similar cannot change this fact. The molecular chemistry (that we ourselves are made up of) has unique and infinite value because it contains the requirements for the life of a developing human.

I’m pretty neither of us grew from a bovine embryo.

My point exactly.

Lots of things “cannot be observed experimentally”. What differences would we expect to observe between a claimed “something that cannot be observed” and something that is imaginary?
I’m not sure what you’re getting at since it was stated that by reason (and even science I believe it was mentioned) we are inherently human and thus deserving the dignity proper of a person.
 
It really does not matter what kind of scientific testing is done on the tilma. There is no evidence it is the very same tilma and has not been replaced with numerous others over time. It’s never been in controlled conditions.
Yes it does matter because they cannot figure out as of yet what materials were used on the Tilma?
 
Firstly, you never stated what those arguments were. Secondly, by your definition a human is a person (how redundant!) when brain wave activity can be detected, which is around the 25th week of gestation (some propose an even later date).
I did not define human as person. I discussed personhood, which is a well known philosophical term. It would be up to competent medical authorities to determine when brainwaves reach a threshold indicative of brain activity. From that determination lawmakers could back off several weeks to draw a bright line. I don’t accept the 25th week as the line. In fact, many pro-life groups claim 6 weeks, which is a claim seemingly pulled from thin air.
That being said the purpose of those pictures I posted were to show you that the 17th week developing human has the behavioural characteristics one would find in an infant.
If they have the “behavioral characteristics” then they have brain wave activity in the cerebral cortex - that’s an even stronger qualifier of personhood than I set. It would be a medical determination; however, whether these activities were behavioral or reflexive.
So, my question is, do you truly think that this human (at 17 weeks) has no right to live because brain wave activity cannot be detected?
I do not accept your assertion that brain wave activity is not present in the fetus at this point of gestation. In any case, what I think and what the law should say are two different things. With rare exception, I don’t think women should have abortions. That does not mean that my personal opinion should trump proper formulation of the law.
I never said that you did. I was however demonstrating the hyprocrisy involved in determining the personhood/protection of a child in utero as was demonstrated in my previous post. If by law you can convict a person of double homicide in the death of a pregnant woman (in some cases only the unborn child dies) then by that very same law abortion should be viewed as murder.
There is no hypocrisy involved. The Republicans controlled both Congress and the Presidency when they passed the law. The Democrats had named most of the justices to the U.S. Supreme Court when they struck down laws prohibiting abortions. So both political parties are being true to their word. Both parties are wrong because they both use the line drawing fallacy. The Republicans want no line, so they back it up all the way to conception. The Democrats want no line, so they advance it all the way to live birth.
Have we somehow established with these pictures that an infant does not go through an embryonic period of development?
No, we have established that without the religious claim of ensoulment at conception, there is no secular argument against the scientific and therapeutic use of embryos.

In case you were thinking that the Church has always held the position that ensoulment happens at conception, it’s not that clear. The Church has always considered abortion a grave sin, but in past centuries they had differences of opinion on when the fetus is ensouled. In centuries past, most but not all RC scholars or Popes who wrote on the issue of ensoulment or abortion stated or implied that ensoulment happened at the quickening, not at conception.
The difference between a human embryo and a bovine embryo is that one is a human and the other a cow.
Neither is a human or a cow. Without analyzing the proteins and DNA, nobody can tell the difference. Do we really want to accept that scientifically speaking what makes humans distinct from animals is our protein and DNA composition? Take any two microorganism species and chances are excellent that the human to bovine chemistry is much closer than the microorganisms.
And that a human can only give birth to a human and a cow can only give birth to a cow.
Actually, I think that cows might be able to give birth to human babies if there were no biomedical ethics or legal issues to stop scientists from doing it. Scientists use surrogate placental mammals in this way to have live births of different endangered species.
I’m not sure what you’re getting at
The text you quoted stated that the soul of an embryo cannot be observed experimentally. So I’m asking you this:

What difference would we expect to observe between something that “cannot be observed experimentally” and something that is imaginary? Simply put, our observations would be identical – no observation.

So I can claim anything I want and it will never be disproved provided that I add “it cannot be observed experimentally”.
 
It’s not opinion, we have his letters you can check for yourself. He ridiculed the Christian interpretation of God. His vision of God had no trinity, never communicated with humans, never performed miracles, never influenced the world in any way after creating it. That’s why he used the word Creator not God. This vision of God was fashionable among the elites of the Enlightenment.

There are 56 signatories confirming the content of the Declaration of Indepence written as such for the citizens of the United States of America. It would therefore behoove us to interpret said document through the eyes of Thomas Jefferson and those of like mind only (and who most likely did not represent the religious norms of their day). That being said, Jefferson did acknowledge God to whom he owed his existence to.

Believe me, dear Sir: there is not in the British empire a man who more cordially loves a union with Great Britain than I do. But, by the God that made me, I will cease to exist before I yield to a connection on such terms as the British Parliament propose; and in this, I think I speak the sentiments of America.

—Thomas Jefferson, November 29, 1775[5]

As such, the God to whom he refers to as the Creator in the Declaration is that entity which has created all men equal with inalienable rights the first of which is life .

Apparently the signers of the document didn’t think so. Abortion before the quickening was permitted under English Common Law. The signers of the Declaration had a perfect chance to outlaw abortion when they wrote the Constitution. They didn’t.

This however was based on a false understanding of when life began. By 1837 however all abortions were considered a felony. The CC by the way consistently believed that life began at conception (it’s those “darned” Protestants that are to be blamed :p).

Nevertheless quickening was wrong and this is why: a woman feels the first movements of her baby in the 4 or 5th month:

"But pregnant women don’t “feel life” until four or five months!

The inside of the uterus has no feeling. The baby has to be almost a foot long (30 cm.) and weigh about one pound (454 gm.) before he or she is large enough to brace a shoulder against one wall and kick hard enough against the opposite wall to dent it outward. Then the mother feels it because the outside of the uterus is covered by a sensitive peritoneal surface."

In actuality a human fetus begins to move:

“In the sixth to seventh weeks. . . . If the area of the lips is gently stroked, the child responds by bending the upper body to one side and making a quick backward motion with his arms. This is called a ‘total pattern response’ because it involves most of the body, rather than a local part.” L. B. Arey, Developmental Anatomy (6th ed.), Philadelphia: W. B. Sanders Co., 1954

At eight weeks, “if we tickle the baby’s nose, he will flex his head backwards away from the stimulus.” A. Hellgers, M.D., “Fetal Development, 31,” Theological Studies, vol. 3, no. 7, 1970, p. 26

Another example is from a surgical technician whose letter said, "When we opened her abdomen (for a tubal pregnancy), the tube had expelled an inch-long fetus, about 4-6 weeks old. It was still alive in the sack. “That tiny baby was waving its little arms and kicking its little legs and even turned its whole body over.” J. Dobson, Focus on the Family Mag., Aug. ’91, pg. 16

Look at it this way… Wouldn’t you like the whole world to come to the RCC? But do you expect it in your lifetime? I’m not looking for middle ground, but a better understanding of people sharing the planet.
I would like for the whole world to seek Truth, the one and only Truth that exists. And there is no point in understanding my fellow Catholics or myself if your intent is to eventually do away with our creed and dogmas, unless of course, you wish to use what you learn against us.
 
I did not define human as person. I discussed personhood, which is a well known philosophical term. It would be up to competent medical authorities to determine when brainwaves reach a threshold indicative of brain activity. From that determination lawmakers could back off several weeks to draw a bright line. I don’t accept the 25th week as the line. In fact, many pro-life groups claim 6 weeks, which is a claim seemingly pulled from thin air.
You defined personhood once brain wave activity could be detected. Now here is what I found in one article about brain wave activity in a fetus (confirming the 25th week mark posited):

“When people, including physicians, talk about “brain waves” and “brain activity” they are referring to organized activity in the cortex. While no embryo or fetus has ever been found to have “brain waves,” extensive EEG studies have been done on premature babies. A very good summary of their findings can be found in Pain and its effects in the human neonate and fetus,” a review article (often cited by “pro-lifers” writing about fetal pain, but not about brain development) by K.J.S. Anand, a leading researcher on pain in newborns, and P.R. Hickey, published in NEJM:"

“Functional maturity of the cerebral cortex is suggested by fetal and neonatal electroencephalographic patterns…First, intermittent electroencephalograpic bursts in both cerebral hemispheres are first seen at 20 weeks gestation; they become sustained at 22 weeks and bilaterally synchronous at 26 to 27 weeks.”

“There are reasons, based on the physics of the EEG, why this has to be so. Remember, an EEG involves measuring varying electrical potential across a dipole, or separated charges. To get scalp or surface potentials from the cortex requires three things: neurons, dendrites, and axons, with synapses between them. Since these requirements are not present in the human cortex before 20-24 weeks of gestation, it is not possible to record “brain waves” prior to 20-24 weeks. Period. End of story. Scientists do not attempt to find electrocortical activity in embryos and fetuses because they know more about the physical structure of the developing human brain than they did in 1963.”

eileen.250x.com/Main/Einstein/Brain_Waves.htm

But you rejected this claim earlier (stating that it was more than likely earlier than the 25 th week). So how are we to determine the personhood of a developing human?

I also found this to on a pro-life site:

“At 40 days, about five days after he or she turned 5 weeks old, the embryo’s brain waves can be detected by an electroencephalogram.”

“You may hear this disputed by pro-choicers; that these are not organized brain waves and thus should not be called brain waves at all, they are not from the higher brain structures, they are not indicative of true brain function, of thought, of awareness. All of these facts are disputed not just in the abortion debate, but in medicine in general. An honest answer to the question “Does the embryo think?” is simply “We don’t know.” There is ample reason to think that he or she does, however. The embryonic body is not built like a automobile or baked like a cake; it is a living being and it grows like one. Unlike human creations, nature’s unfinished specimens are not piles of useless parts. All the parts of a healthy living thing are, at all times, functional to some degree. Nothing just sits there - life requires motion, action, usefulness. At no time does the embryo have a nonfunctional brain (or any other organ). It has a brain that is functional to the degree it is developed. Of course that brain cannot perform all the functions of an adult brain; but it is not just sitting there. It is working, in all its parts, including those parts that exist entirely so as to make us human beings conscious, aware, willful creatures.”

6 Weeks

"Dr. Harley Smyth, a neurologist, testified before the Canadian Supreme Court that “at 6 weeks there is the possibility of recording electrical activity from the nervous system already so highly organized that it can subserve . . . purposeful and even co-ordinated movements.”
 
How did this thread turn into a debate about when life begins?

Apparently God had no problem with terminating babies by ordering their heads being dashed on rocks, nor did he have a problem with priests in the old testament preforming curses on women accused of adultery to drink a poison. 😦

I’m really wondering how this is proving a God anyone would want to believe in.

Pushing this issue is not wise IMHO.:eek:
 
I challenge you to find a single elected Democrat at any level who has advocated that.
14 states have no restrictions on late term abortions. I would venture a guess it’s the Democrats not the GOP in control of those state houses.
 
I do not accept your assertion that brain wave activity is not present in the fetus at this point of gestation. In any case, what I think and what the law should say are two different things. With rare exception, I don’t think women should have abortions. That does not mean that my personal opinion should trump proper formulation of the law.

Then research it yourself and see what you find. And use those findings to derive truth and use that truth to affect law. This is as it should be in a democracy.

There is no hypocrisy involved. The Republicans controlled both Congress and the Presidency when they passed the law. The Democrats had named most of the justices to the U.S. Supreme Court when they struck down laws prohibiting abortions. So both political parties are being true to their word. Both parties are wrong because they both use the line drawing fallacy. The Republicans want no line, so they back it up all the way to conception. The Democrats want no line, so they advance it all the way to live birth.

I meant the hyprocrisy (the idea of providing a law to protect the unborn in cases of homicide) of viewing a child in utero as protected under the law in regard to homicide and yet still allowing abortion to continue (which is the murder of a child in utero).

No, we have established that without the religious claim of ensoulment at conception, there is no secular argument against the scientific and therapeutic use of embryos.

No, you have not established anything: biologically (human) life starts at conception.

In case you were thinking that the Church has always held the position that ensoulment happens at conception, it’s not that clear. The Church has always considered abortion a grave sin, but in past centuries they had differences of opinion on when the fetus is ensouled. In centuries past, most but not all RC scholars or Popes who wrote on the issue of ensoulment or abortion stated or implied that ensoulment happened at the quickening, not at conception.

From what I understand the Church has always stated life starts at conception (“humans are not only souls but also bodies”).

It’s true that some doctors and fathers and theologians of the Church raised the question of “ensoulment,” asking when an unborn baby receives a soul, and given different answers. But in Christian (as opposed to Gnostic) tradition, humans are not only souls but also bodies. And thus no Father ever, ever used the idea of later ensoulment (often borrowed from Aristotle) to excuse or permit abortion.

Furthermore,

In Christian tradition, until the 1960s, life was thought to begin at conception, regardless of the details certain thinkers put forth about speculative embryonic anthropology.

Neither is a human or a cow. Without analyzing the proteins and DNA, nobody can tell the difference. Do we really want to accept that scientifically speaking what makes humans distinct from animals is our protein and DNA composition? Take any two microorganism species and chances are excellent that the human to bovine chemistry is much closer than the microorganisms.

Yes, you can tell the difference, women who are pregnant are biologically carrying a human/baby (not a cow) so it doesn’t really matter how much you try to state your case about similar molecular chemistry. What you find in a zygote is what you’ll find in an adult.

Actually, I think that cows might be able to give birth to human babies if there were no biomedical ethics or legal issues to stop scientists from doing it. Scientists use surrogate placental mammals in this way to have live births of different endangered species.

But only through human manipulation can this occur otherwise I see no possibility whatsoever of a cow spontaneously giving birth to a human. :eek:

The text you quoted stated that the soul of an embryo cannot be observed experimentally. So I’m asking you this:

What difference would we expect to observe between something that “cannot be observed experimentally” and something that is imaginary? Simply put, our observations would be identical – no observation.

So I can claim anything I want and it will never be disproved provided that I add “it cannot be observed experimentally”.
But the sentence right after that explains how through reason (and science) we can see how life begins at conception. God bless.
 
How did this thread turn into a debate about when life begins?

Apparently God had no problem with terminating babies by ordering their heads being dashed on rocks, nor did he have a problem with priests in the old testament preforming curses on women accused of adultery to drink a poison. 😦

I’m really wondering how this is proving a God anyone would want to believe in.

Pushing this issue is not wise IMHO.:eek:
Have you ever really tried to read the Bible in its entirety or do you just decompartmentalize it to its more sensational parts? .
 
As such, the God to whom he refers to as the Creator in the Declaration is that entity which has created all men equal with inalienable rights the first of which is life.
I’m not seeing your point. I wrote that Jefferson believed in a supreme being. The point is he did not believe in the Christian idea of God. He wrote extensively in his private letters how he thought Christianity was a perversion of his idea of God and of Jesus’s teachings.
The CC by the way consistently believed that life began at conception…
It’s more nuanced. Although the CC has always taught that abortion at any point in pregnancy is sinful, in previous centuries there were documents that implied or stated disagreements about when ensoulment happened or if the soul somehow changed during development in the womb.
And there is no point in understanding my fellow Catholics or myself if your intent is to eventually do away with our creed and dogmas, unless of course, you wish to use what you learn against us.
All I can tell you is you’re wrong. Once again you assume when all you have to do is ask.

I really have no interest in changing the religious practice or beliefs of people I don’t know. These people will stay or go on their own and our scribblings here will have no effect on their decision one way or the other.

I am curious to learn more about the present state of thinking in Catholic laity because Catholics in my family are telling my children what to believe against my expressed intent – and it’s not occasional but systematic. Once my children can think critically, if they choose any religion or none at all it is their choice and I will support their decision. Until they are old enough to think critically, I do not want anyone, myself included, telling them what to think about religious matters or for that matter political or philosophical matters. I want to encourage them to explore the world and think for themselves.

Since my family refuses to respect my decision, I need to be in a position to discuss with my children what they are being told to believe. The have come to me and asked questions that surprised me. I refuse to tell them what to think, so I want to be in a position to help these children work through the matters by exploring both sides of the issue. I don’t want to give them straw men arguments for the religious beliefs or else they risk growing up confused about how people can believe the things they do. I want to give them the strongest arguments and counterarguments and let them work through them for themselves.

Ideally, I would teach them critical thinking skill first and they could work their way through without a biased mentor, but my family has seen to it that it’s not a possibility unless I keep my children away from them, which I won’t do.
 
I’m not seeing your point. I wrote that Jefferson believed in a supreme being. The point is he did not believe in the Christian idea of God. He wrote extensively in his private letters how he thought Christianity was a perversion of his idea of God and of Jesus’s teachings.

But he still called God a Creator (as is the Christian God). As such we has his creation do not have a right to destroy what the Creator created. And furthermore, it doesn’t really matter what he alone thought, there were 55 other signatories on the Declaration of Indepence (written for the American people).

It’s more nuanced. Although the CC has always taught that abortion at any point in pregnancy is sinful, in previous centuries there were documents that implied or stated disagreements about when ensoulment happened or if the soul somehow changed during development in the womb.

I’ve answered you in another post.

All I can tell you is you’re wrong. Once again you assume when all you have to do is ask.

I really have no interest in changing the religious practice or beliefs of people I don’t know. These people will stay or go on their own and our scribblings here will have no effect on their decision one way or the other.

I am curious to learn more about the present state of thinking in Catholic laity because Catholics in my family are telling my children what to believe against my expressed intent – and it’s not occasional but systematic. Once my children can think critically, if they choose any religion or none at all it is their choice and I will support their decision. Until they are old enough to think critically, I do not want anyone, myself included, telling them what to think about religious matters or for that matter political or philosophical matters. I want to encourage them to explore the world and think for themselves.

Since my family refuses to respect my decision, I need to be in a position to discuss with my children what they are being told to believe. The have come to me and asked questions that surprised me. I refuse to tell them what to think, so I want to be in a position to help these children work through the matters by exploring both sides of the issue. I don’t want to give them straw men arguments for the religious beliefs or else they risk growing up confused about how people can believe the things they do. I want to give them the strongest arguments and counterarguments and let them work through them for themselves.

Ideally, I would teach them critical thinking skill first and they could work their way through without a biased mentor, but my family has seen to it that it’s not a possibility unless I keep my children away from them, which I won’t do.
But why do this on a forum, why not ask Catholics you know or read the CCC and other such sources to gain insight? I’m not saying I don’t want you here, I’m glad in fact that you are but I’m still not sure what you’ll gain from this.
 
But why do this on a forum, why not ask Catholics you know or read the CCC and other such sources to gain insight? I’m not saying I don’t want you here, I’m glad in fact that you are but I’m still not sure what you’ll gain from this.
That’s a good question, Josie. The CCC teaches orthodoxy, which I have studied quite a bit since I like to study many things including religions. But orthodoxy is not enough. If my Catholic experience taught me anything, it’s that lay Catholics whether through ignorance or intent often have different ways of looking at things than the clergy or catechism. So when I mentor my kids, I want to know what the laity is saying, the arguments they’re using, their reasons for believing. More than that, I want to know how they respond to counterarguments. ← This part is critical. If I taught my children the straw men arguments of the typical atheist, they would think like all too many militant atheists do, that something is wrong with the greater part of the world’s population. I do not want my children growing up thinking this way.

So why here? Well, I was following developments on an atheist forum and came across the posts from the girl supposedly 12 years old. I read posts there where the girl was being manipulated by the atheists, and as a result saw posts here that were shameful. I guess it hit a little close to home since I have twin girls. I do not want my girls to grow up with a worldview that religious people do not have genuine reasons for believing what they believe, even if they decide not to believe those same things. When it comes to religion, I’m trying to make them come to a conclusion that is their own, not mine.

As far as why here, why not with Catholics I know, well, it’s hard to play devil’s advocate and ask probing questions of a person’s religion sitting in a room with them. Believe it or not, I’m not as anti-Catholic as I fear I may have come across playing devil’s advocate and asking probing questions here. In particular, I have a certain soft spot for the Jesuits, their emphasis on scholarship, loyalty, devotion to duty. I know their colorful history with the hierarchy, which makes their appeal to me even greater.

But anyway, it’s not something I want to discuss with people in the same room anymore. It stirs passions on both sides too much. When I asked probing questions with my parish priests as a kid, they were wonderfully patient. They sometimes talked with me over an hour. I distinctly remember being impressed with their patience because when I asked the same kinds of questions to the Catholic laity, well, it wasn’t nearly so cordial and I quickly stopped doing it. Incidentally, I even had to quickly depart from a Baptist minister’s office when I learned that he was not as patient as the priests in my parish (I had a friend assure me that my doubts were because Catholics were all wrong and Protestants all right, so I went to see his minister at his request. Needless to say, my exploration of his hypothesis didn’t last too long.)
 
Read Pope John Paul II’s encyclical The Sanctity of Life ( I believe is the title).

It is not about when life begins according to science. It’s about creating and/or destroying even the possiblity of life (hence fertility intervention and/or birth control as well as abortion and the death penalty). Everyone is arguing over when life begins but we don’t determine when life begins, God does.

It’s not the physical body that God has an interest in, it’s the spirit, the soul. When we create or destroy the physical body or even the possibility of it, we are creating or destroying the vessel God uses to do His will on earth.

Of course this makes no difference to those who don’t believe in God.
 
In order to have treatments now, I think they would have needed that funding over the last decade, not the next.

Private and State Funding for Embryonic Stem Cell Research is Available

“The President’s policy places no obstacles in the path of private or state funding for stem cell research – researchers are receiving support from both sources, in addition to support from the Federal Government.”

“Based on 2002 data, one study reports that private sector research and development in stem cells was being conducted by approximately 1000 scientists in over 30 firms.�”

“Aggregate spending was estimated at $208 million.1� Geron Corporation alone reported that it spent more than $70 million on stem cell research by September 2003.�”

“In the Stem Cell Business News Guide to Stem Cell Companies (Feb 2003), 61 U.S. and international companies are listed as pursuing some form of research or therapeutic product development involving stem cells.� For example, Geron Corp. has announced plans to seek FDA approval to pursue human trials.”

“Some states ban the destruction of human embryonic stem cells for research.� Some permit it, but do not fund it (consistent with federal policy).� And still other states provide funding.�”

As with most medical research, the effort to explore the promise of this science and to develop treatments and cures will require the combined efforts of both the public and private sector.�

hhs.gov/news/press/2004pres/20040714b.html

The Bush administration obstructed their approval for clinical trials. It wasn’t until a new administration came into office that the trail was approved.

“Keep in mind that, although President Bush limited federal funding of embryonic stem cell research to a few existing stem cell colonies, he did not make such research illegal. In fact, embryonic stem cell research has been funded with both private funding and state funding — not to mention that scientists around the world have been engaging in embryonic stem cell research. The results? Nothing notable has occurred in embryonic stem cell research other than the scientific fraud committed by the infamous South Korean researcher Hwang Woo-Suk.”

foxforum.blogs.foxnews.com/2009/03/09/milloy_stem_cells/

“However, the co-ordinator of the EuroStemCell project, Professor Austin Smith, underlines, in his interview with Cordis News, that the ban of federal funding in the US does not make embryonic stem cell research illegal in the US and that the individual States, such as California, have their own stem cell funding initiatives, and private companies are free to carry out their own research.”

euractiv.com/en/science/eu-funding-stem-cell-research-trigger-brain-gain/article-156956

All of them? Fox News is liberal? The Wall Street Journal is liberal?

Generally speaking the media is liberal.

Nonsense. Embryonic stem cells obtained through SCNT require no immunosuppressive therapies.

Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Stanford University School of Medicine, 300 Pasteur Drive, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.

“Given their self-renewing and pluripotent capabilities, human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) are well poised as a cellular source for tissue regeneration therapy. However, the host immune response against transplanted hESCs is not well characterized. In fact, controversy remains as to whether hESCs have immune-privileged properties. To address this issue, we used in vivo bioluminescent imaging to track the fate of transplanted hESCs stably transduced with a double-fusion reporter gene consisting of firefly luciferase and enhanced GFP. We show that survival after transplant is significantly limited in immunocompetent as opposed to immunodeficient mice. Repeated transplantation of hESCs into immunocompetent hosts results in accelerated hESC death, suggesting an adaptive donor-specific immune response. Our data demonstrate that transplanted hESCs trigger robust cellular and humoral immune responses, resulting in intragraft infiltration of inflammatory cells and subsequent hESC rejection. Moreover, we have found CD4(+) T cells to be an important modulator of hESC immune-mediated rejection. Finally, we show that immunosuppressive drug regimens can mitigate the anti-hESC immune response and that a regimen of combined tacrolimus and sirolimus therapies significantly prolongs survival of hESCs for up to 28 days. Taken together, these data suggest that hESCs are immunogenic, trigger both cellular and humoral-mediated pathways, and, as a result, are rapidly rejected in xenogeneic hosts. This process can be mitigated by a combined immunosuppressive regimen as assessed by molecular imaging approaches.”

asntr.org/news/immunosuppressive-therapy-mitigates-immunological/?searchterm=survival
to be continued. . . . 😃
 
Where is a list of the 70 treatments that have gone through clinical trials to demonstrate their efficacy? That is the standard you set earlier for ESCR, even though it could not proceed to clinical trial in many major research nations due to political actions. Yet ASCR did not have this restriction. So where are the 70 successful clinical trials for it? Where is the list?

But President Obama’s particular criticism of his predecessor’s executive order could not be more wrong. In the seven-and-a-half years that have passed since President Bush signed his executive order, as many as 70 therapeutic uses have been developed using adult stem cells–research which the Catholic Church fully supports–but not a single one has been developed using embryonic stem cells.

“Sound science,” in other words, is on the side of those who uphold “moral values” by opposing the destruction of human embryos for research. That makes it all the more clear that the political pressure for expanded funding for ESCR has nothing to do with actual scientific advances, and everything to do with an ideology that devalues unborn human life.

catholicism.about.com/b/2009/03/09/change-we-cant-believe-in.htm

Adult Stem Cells
Cancers:

Brain Cancer
Retinoblastoma
Ovarian Cancer
Skin Cancer: Merkel Cell Carcinoma
Testicular Cancer
Tumors abdominal organs Lymphoma
Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma
Hodgkin’s Lymphoma
Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia
Acute Myelogenous Leukemia
Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia
Juvenile Myelomonocytic Leukemia
Chronic Myelomonocytic Leukemia
Cancer of the lymph nodes: Angioimmunoblastic Lymphadenopathy
Multiple Myeloma
Myelodysplasia
Breast Cancer
Neuroblastoma
Renal Cell Carcinoma
Various Solid Tumors
Soft Tissue Sarcoma
Ewing’s Sarcoma
Waldenstrom’s macroglobulinemia
Hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis
POEMS syndrome
Myelofibrosis
Auto-Immune Diseases

Diabetes Type I (Juvenile)
Systemic Lupus
Sjogren’s Syndrome
Myasthenia
Autoimmune Cytopenia
Scleromyxedema
Scleroderma
Crohn’s Disease
Behcet’s Disease
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Juvenile Arthritis
Multiple Sclerosis
Polychondritis
Systemic Vasculitis
Alopecia Universalis
Buerger’s Disease
Cardiovascular

Acute Heart Damage
Chronic Coronary Artery Disease
Ocular

Corneal regeneration
Immunodeficiencies

Severe Combined Immunodeficiency Syndrome
X-linked Lymphoproliferative Syndrome
X-linked Hyper immunoglobulin M Syndrome
Neural Degenerative Diseases and Injuries

Parkinson’s Disease
Spinal Cord Injury
Stroke Damage
Anemias and Other Blood Conditions

Sickle Cell Anemia
Sideroblastic Anemia
Aplastic Anemia
Red Cell Aplasia
Amegakaryocytic Thrombocytopenia
Thalassemia
Primary Amyloidosis
Diamond Blackfan Anemia
Fanconi’s Anemia
Chronic Epstein-Barr Infection
Wounds and Injuries

Limb Gangrene
Surface Wound Healing
Jawbone Replacement
Skull Bone Repair
Other Metabolic Disorders

Hurler’s Syndrome
Osteogenesis Imperfecta
Krabbe Leukodystrophy
Osteopetrosis
Cerebral X-Linked Adrenoleukodystrophy
Liver Disease

Chronic Liver Failure
Liver Cirrhosis
Bladder Disease

End-Stage Bladder Disease

Peer-Reviewed References (not a complete listing, sample references)

The Facts - Prentice, D. “Adult Stem Cells” Appendix K in Monitoring Stem Cell Research: A Report of the President’s Council on Bioethics (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 2004), 309-346.

stemcellresearch.org/facts/treatments.htm

The end. 😃
 
"Keep in mind that, although President Bush limited federal funding of embryonic stem cell research to a few existing stem cell colonies, he did not make such research illegal.
This cut and paste did not address the issue at all. The Bush administration could not make ESCR illegal, but they controlled the FDA and never let a single clinical trial get approval. Other major biomedical research nations also had varying degrees of political and funding restrictions on relevant research.
Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Stanford University School of Medicine, 300 Pasteur Drive, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
Again, this cut and paste doesn’t even discuss the issue. It doesn’t even touch on SCNT, which no researcher in the field is suggesting, or could even imagine how it would require immunosuppressive therapy.
 
Where is a list of the 70 treatments that have gone through clinical trials to demonstrate their efficacy?

stemcellresearch.org/facts/treatments.htm

The end. 😃
Not one example on this list meets the standard you set for ESCR, a successful clinical trial – not one. The list of peer-reviewed journal entries cover isolated cases, meta analysis, or conjecture, not one is a clinical trial let alone a successful one.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top