Monday, July 30, 2007

Preview of Coming Attractions: The Push to Permit Reproductive Cloning


The big secret that the media rarely address is that many bioethicists and bioscientists actually support reproductive cloning. Yes, yes, I know: Most scientific organizations, such as the NAS, and big-name bioethicists currently oppose permitting a cloned embryo to be implanted and gestated to birth. But this opposition isn't generally based on principled moral objections to cloning as a form of reproduction (replication). To the contrary: Many believe there is a fundamental right to reproduce by any means desired or necessary. Thus, objections among this camp are based on safety concerns. Currently, animal cloning is very inefficient, also leading to many miscarriages, birth defects, and the deaths of birth mothers.

Still, even now there are calls in some quarters to damn the safety concerns and go full speed ahead with permitting reproductive cloning. One such advocacy piece, "Let's Legalize Cloning," appeared in the July 18 New Scientist (no link available). Written by Glasgow Caledonian University bioethicist Hugh McLachlan, we are told that even safety should cause us little concern. He writes:

We know from animal cloning studies that the risks to the mother and the baby are likely to be very high, although they may diminish as the technique is perfected. Yet in other areas of reproduction (or life in general) safety alone is not seen as sufficient grounds to make something illegal. The risks should be explained to the prospective mother, and she should then have the right to decide for herself, as with any other medical procedure, whether to accept them.

The potential baby, of course, cannot give consent. There may be an increased risk of miscarriage or being born with a deformity, but for people born as a result of cloning, it is their only chance of life. Cloning is therefore not a risk but an opportunity. If you could only have been born as a clone, with the risks that entails, would you have wanted your life to have been prevented? I would say loudly: no.
The idea that cloning presents an "opportunity" for the nonexistent to become existent seems close to some religious doctrines about married couples having a duty to bring babies into the world. That point aside, non-existent beings have no right to come into existence, and if they don't, they will never know it, because there will never be a "they" to know that they don't exist.
Whew.

Moreover, notice the sheer indifference to the pain and suffering that would be caused, miscarriages, abortions, and human experimentation that would be involved in such an endeavor. To make cloning "safe" would require repeated creation of cloned embryos to study why gene expression is defective. It would require implantation and abortion to learn why some cloned fetuses develop with defects or in such a way as to endanger the birth mother. And it would require the surviving babies to be studied throughout their lives to determine whether they exhibit later resulting health or developmental difficulties. In other words, it would be to treat some people as experiments.

But when one's philosophy denies the intrinsic value of human life--and the primary impetus in "ethics" becomes anything goes to fulfill wants and desires--advocacy such as McLachlan's is entirely logical. This is why I don't view him as a fringe rider, but merely a candid harbinger of things to come.

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5 Comments:

At July 30, 2007 , Blogger Jason Dulle said...

You spoke of "religious doctrines about married couples having a duty to bring babies into the world" in a seemingly negative light. I'm not a Catholic, and I don't condemn birth control, but I do believe the purpose for marriage is children. The natural purpose of our sexual organs is to pro-create. Apart from that reason, why have them? The natural purpose of marriage is to bring together the two sexual organs capable of procreating. Marriage has always been about starting a family. Only in recent decades have we begun to separate the two...to our own peril.

I don't think we have to have as many kids as possible, but for normal, healthy people of childbearing years to get married without wanting children is to forsake the purpose of marriage, and the natural purpose of their sexual organs.

Jason

 
At July 30, 2007 , Blogger Wesley J. Smith said...

I wasn't referencing Catholic teaching, which as I understand it, holds that married couples should not do anything to prevent the full fruition of their love by preventing conception.

I was referencing a belief that children are pre-existent and that we thus have should let as many of them as we can into the world. I wasn't criticizing this concept: I don't talk religion here, per se, nor am I qualified to do so. I was saying that it seemed ironic that a bioethicist would impliedly come close to the same idea of a quasi-duty to permit cloned babies into the world in his advocacy.

Thanks for writing, Jason.

 
At July 30, 2007 , Blogger John Howard said...

There is definitely something more than ironic about him saying that it is that person's "only chance" to be born, so they can't complain. And I don't think it jibes with the idea of pre-existing souls as I understand them. It's not like that soul would never get a chance to be born unless that body is created for it. It would inhabit the "next" body. That's the basis of seeing each other as equals and having compassion for people born into different worldly circumstances - we could have been in that person's shoes, and inside we are the same. So if a cloned body is not created, the person will still be born, but will inhabit some other family's child.

This guy reveals his deep materialism by denying souls. And I have no doubt that though he congratulates cloners for creating people who must be happy to be alive, he also would have no qualms about aborting the attempts that don't seem to be coming out right.

 
At July 30, 2007 , Blogger Royale said...

"Cloning is therefore not a risk but an opportunity. If you could only have been born as a clone, with the risks that entails, would you have wanted your life to have been prevented?"


The same can be said of "normal" births. His logic would mean every woman is walking around with 300,000 opportunities contained in the potentiality of their eggs. A man's sperm - several million opportunities.

 
At July 30, 2007 , Blogger Don Nelson said...

Here’s a quote from Gilbert Meilaender. It’s in the personal statements section of Human Cloning and Human Dignity, a report of the president’s council on bioethics. I think it’s relevant to this post. Would be interesting to see what others think about it. I agree with Professor Meilaender. My take is that unless we BAN the creating of cloned human entities for any reason, cloning for any reason is inevitable and this guy University of Glasgow bioethicist Hugh McLachlan cannot be thinking on the fringe at all. Professor Meilaender also shows why the work of promoting human exceptionalism is important right NOW.

“Because the defense of cloning-for-biomedical-research rests ultimately upon a view that the will and choice of some confers moral status on others, and because no coherent defense of the "developmental" approach to human dignity and worth has been offered by proponents of research cloning, I think it very unlikely that research – if allowed to proceed – can really be confined to the early blastocyst. With no principled reasons to place limits on our will, and with the likelihood that more developed embryos or fetuses will actually be much more useful for researchers, I doubt whether the momentum of cloning research can be stopped in any way other than by stopping all human cloning. Indeed, I suspect that, if cloning-for-biomedical-research proceeds, the distinction between cloning-for-biomedical-research and cloning-to-produce-children will come to seem artificial. Having accustomed ourselves to use cloning techniques to shape and mold the next generation, we will be hard-pressed to explain why we should not, in fact, exercise an even fuller control by cloning-to-produce-children. Our earlier opposition to it will seem to have been merely sentimental.”

 

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