J
jpm1977
Guest
Is it established doctrine that the embryos cannot be implanted? I thought that was a point of debate in this thread. I don’t know that there’s been a position of the Church established on this particular point. I admit, I may have missed something earlier in the thread, so I don’t mean to belabor something that’s been established.As I read it, the author of the article, William Saletan, tried to imply that there is an unsettled debate; I found his attempt lacking:
“It turns out that Catholic faith in reason cuts both ways. It can dispel the yuck factor but can just as easily override our sense of goodness. That’s the inadvertent lesson of Pacholczyk’s morning presentation on women who “adopt”—i.e., implant and carry to term—IVF embryos. He asserts that such adoptions are intrinsically evil. I stare at him in disbelief, but he makes a case. Procreation is unitary; therefore, just as it’s wrong to have sex without openness to pregnancy, it’s wrong to get pregnant without sex. What if a woman has hired a clinic to cultivate IVF embryos and is on the table ready to have them implanted? Pacholczyk says she should “stop the train of evil”—get up and leave the clinic. The embryos must be left in limbo because they can’t be “licitly” implanted.”
The bolds (mine) are all esablished points of Catholic doctrine.
"Father Thomas Williams, the dean of university’s theology school, makes the opposite case. Pacholczyk’s theory collapses, he says, because it implies that IVF embryos are “partially procreated children.” “All beings are either persons or non-persons,” Williams argues. “From a Catholic perspective, there’s no such thing as partial persons, part something and part someone.”
I don’t disagree with Father Williams assertion that there is no such thing as a partially created person, but this doesn’t come close to arguing the “opposite” of Pacholczyk’s prior statements about the immorality of implanting IVF embryos. It also fails to demonstrate how Pacholczyk’s argument implies that the embryos are “partially procreated children.”
I think the article shows that, contrary to popular belief, the Church is at the forefront of science (not in the Dark Ages), but also tries to imply that because the Church has scientists/priests discussing certain issues, that more might be open to debate than previously thought.
Saletan’s not writing for a Catholic audience in the article, so I would guess he left out a lot of Wiliams’s and Pach.'s debate. Nonetheless, does Pach. imply the embryos are not fully human? If they are, don’t they have the right, if possible, to grow to maturity? If so, then why shouldn’t they be implanted?
On the other hand, if there are millions of them, how do you morally pick which ones would and would not be given the opportunity to be “born” or mature–assuming they can’t all be? Must you keep them all in suspended animation until the end of time?
Is keeping them cryogenically frozen when they are not self-supporting the equivalent of administering food and artificial respiration to someone who is truly incapable of living without machine support and is “brain dead”? I thought in certain circumstances, the church allows breathing apparatus and feeding tubes to be removed if the person is truly “brain dead” as the Church would accept the term (not just in a coma), but I could be wrong.
Assuming the embryos are truly brain dead as the Church would accept that term (and it seems like they would be: If you are twelve cells, or a hundred cells, without a brain, you may be human but you can’t be “brain alive” can you?), is the moral thing to thaw them all out and let them die naturally?
I know I am probably circling back to square one here, but it seems to me that might be the moral thing to do if they cannot all be saved, and I know of no way they could all be saved right now.