Interesting viewpoint. I think your point about the morality of having children despite the high natural miscarriage rate is a good one.
My basic view is that human moral value develops throughout pregnancy (and indeed continues to develop after birth). I don’t think there’s a simple binary switch from “no value” to “value”. I’d treat it more like a gradual ramp-up beginning with brain development during pregnancy.
I’m curious how you feel about culturing of naive embryonic stem cells. It’s possible to culture cells from a very early embryo and maintain their epigenomic state. One might then perform some editing on each, then grow each into a colony of perhaps 100 cells before destructively sequencing some of the stem cells and then performing subsequent edits on the stem cells in which the edits successfully took place.
If done correctly, the process would result in an embryo with much better prospects for a healthy and happy life. One embryo goes in and one embryo goes out. But the sequencing in the interim steps would require the destruction of naive embryonic stem cells.
Would you consider such a process morally permissible?
Interesting viewpoint. I think your point about the morality of having children despite the high natural miscarriage rate is a good one.
My basic view is that human moral value develops throughout pregnancy (and indeed continues to develop after birth). I don’t think there’s a simple binary switch from “no value” to “value”. I’d treat it more like a gradual ramp-up beginning with brain development during pregnancy.
I’m curious how you feel about culturing of naive embryonic stem cells. It’s possible to culture cells from a very early embryo and maintain their epigenomic state. One might then perform some editing on each, then grow each into a colony of perhaps 100 cells before destructively sequencing some of the stem cells and then performing subsequent edits on the stem cells in which the edits successfully took place.
If done correctly, the process would result in an embryo with much better prospects for a healthy and happy life. One embryo goes in and one embryo goes out. But the sequencing in the interim steps would require the destruction of naive embryonic stem cells.
Would you consider such a process morally permissible?