K
kellyb32
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I am taking an online psychology class and we are discussing stem cell research. This is in full, the discussion thread my professor posted, I underlined the last sentence for emphasis. She said, “Stem cell research is fascinating! Actually, this research has been performed on animals for years (one of my friends was doing so at the University of Michigan). What scientists have done is first lesion specific parts of the brain (e.g. the substania nigra). Now, the neurons are dead. Then, they take embryonic tissue and graft it onto the lesioned area. What happens is that the dendrites start to grow and the lesioned area fills! What you must now think about is how embryonic tissue is collected. As you may have suspected, animals are impregnated and then the embryo is aborted. There is absolutely no way that the American government will allow this to occur with human beings. However, stem cell research is conducted with embryos that are fertilized outside of a woman’s body. Thus, the embryo is not aborted. But, in order to obtain an embryo, a woman must donate ova; the ova are then fertilized with sperm, which soon develop into embryos in the laboratory. Our ultra-conservative, right-wing, staunchly religious American government believes that all ova are the beginning of life so this research has been stifled due to lack of funding.”
Can you help me respond to her without getting theological about the problem with this kind of research? I am questioning her about why embryonic stem cell research (SCR) is so important when adult stem cells and umbilical cord blood have already been used successfully. I also am asking what she personally believes is moral and ethical with SCR. One more thing I am addressing is if she considers ESCR to be human experimentation (like the thread on human-animal hybrids for SCR), and if she thinks human cloning would be acceptable for SCR.
So with that in mind, how can I address her scientifically, morally, ethically, and most importantly charitably?
Can you help me respond to her without getting theological about the problem with this kind of research? I am questioning her about why embryonic stem cell research (SCR) is so important when adult stem cells and umbilical cord blood have already been used successfully. I also am asking what she personally believes is moral and ethical with SCR. One more thing I am addressing is if she considers ESCR to be human experimentation (like the thread on human-animal hybrids for SCR), and if she thinks human cloning would be acceptable for SCR.
So with that in mind, how can I address her scientifically, morally, ethically, and most importantly charitably?