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he
science of human embryology stubbornly refuses to cooperate with
Ronald Bailey.
Bailey
continues to insist that embryos are analogous to somatic cells.
It is, however, a stubborn fact of science that somatic cells are
functionally parts of larger organisms. In this respect, they are
analogous, albeit loosely, to gametes. Human embryos, by contrast,
are distinct organisms that, unless prevented from doing so, actively
develop themselves to more mature stages of the human organisms
they already are with their distinctness and identity intact. That
is why it is true to say that while you and I were never sperm cells
or ova (just as someone who came into being by cloning was never
a somatic cell), you and I truly were once embryos, just as we were
once adolescents, children, infants, and fetuses.
When Bailey
conceded in his
original response to our
criticisms that all of us were indeed once embryos, his claim
to be able to show on the basis of science that human embryos are
not human beings collapsed. So he quietly shifted the argument from
science to philosophy. "When we were embryos," according
to Bailey, "we were not yet people." Why not? Because,
he claimed, only a being with mental functions, or the immediately
exercisable capacity for such functions, has moral value (i.e.,
is a "person").
In response,
we argued that human beings have intrinsic, and not merely instrumental,
value. Each of us has worth because of what we are, not because
of the properties or states that we happen to instantiate. (This
is the basis of the principle of equal rights; no one has greater
or less worth and dignity by virtue of differences in intelligence,
strength, health, etc.) It follows that human beings have worth,
dignity, and basic rights from the point at which they come to be.
People do not acquire worth, dignity, and basic rights only after
coming to be; nor can they lose these features prior to ceasing
to be, by dying. All living human beings, irrespective of age, size,
physical or mental ability, condition of dependency, or stage of
development are owed respect; none may legitimately be enslaved
or in any other way relegated to the status of a mere means to others'
ends.
In his new
reply, Bailey reiterates his claim that human embryos lack moral
worth because they have not yet developed brains and the immediately
exercisable capacity for mental functions. But he again fails to
provide the slightest support for this position. In fact, he now
makes matters worse by asserting that "if our brain activity
ceases — our thoughts, memories, emotions, and intentions cease
— we have ceased to be." If, as he had earlier agreed, human
beings are essentially physical organisms, rather than (as philosophical
dualists wrongly suppose) spirits or centers of consciousness inhabiting
bodies, or, alternatively, mere series of experiences, then this
claim is plainly false. In any event, Bailey's asserting it commits
him to the very dualism he had previously — and rightly — rejected.
Bailey mischaracterizes
and fails to come to terms with our refutation of his claim that
possession of a functioning brain is a requirement of "personhood.".
We did not argue merely that the brain-dead human being is dead
while an embryo is alive. Our point was that brain death is accepted
as the criterion of death not because the brain is needed for mental
functions, but because without a brain at that stage of life then
the organism ceases to be. After death, the cells in the
corpse remain alive, but (if one assumes that brain death is a valid
criterion) then there is not a unitary organism.
Moreover, as
we and many others (including some who hold a position like Bailey's)
have observed, there is no logically consistent way for someone
holding Bailey's position to condemn the killing of infants or comatose
humans, since these people also lack mental functioning. Bailey
now replies that one can condemn killing the comatose, the asleep,
and infants, because, "all have more or less functioning brains
. . ." But the phrase, "more or less functioning,"
slurs over a crucial distinction. Infants and the permanently comatose
do not have brains capable of sustaining mental acts. The
function their brains perform is precisely to organize the various
tissues and organs so that there is a unitary, self-integrating
human organism — a function performed by other bodily parts in human
beings at the embryonic stage. So, if one's reason for denying moral
worth to human embryos is that they lack mental functioning, or
the immediately exercisable capacity for mental functions, then
it follows (as Peter Singer has the candor to acknowledge) that
infants and people in permanent comas lack moral worth. But infants
and the comatose clearly are beings of moral worth, and so
Bailey's position is mistaken.
Returning now
from philosophy to biology, Bailey takes one more stab at proving
that human embryos are not human beings. We had asserted, in line
with every scientific text on embryology we have been able to discover,
that the embryo is a distinct member of the human species.
Bailey now says that, "Science [our italics] shows us
that it is not so." And how does science do this? "Since
[identical twins] develop from the same fertilized egg, their genes
are identical. They clearly become 'distinct' sometime after conception."
Bailey's claim
that identical twin embryos are not distinct human beings because
they lack distinct genomes, if correct, would prove that no identical
twins (including, for example, 25-year-olds) are distinct from each
other. It also would prove that all clones (of whatever species)
are identical to the beings from which they were cloned. We clarified
this issue in our second reply to Bailey: One set of evidence shows
that the embryo is human; another set that the embryo is distinct
from his or her mother and father (normally, though not in the case
of clones, having a distinct genetic makeup); and still another
set of evidence shows that the embryo is a whole organism, as opposed
to being functionally a part of a larger organism.
What is true
is that identical twins do not become distinct until the conception
of the second one (so Bailey's claim that distinctness comes "after
conception" is ambiguous — it is not clear which twin's conception
he refers to). In every successful human conception, a distinct,
living human individual comes to be with the fertilization of the
oocyte by the spermatozoan. In the case of monozygotic twinning,
another distinct, living human individual is generated from the
cells of an already extant embryonic human being, through extrinsic
division. (In recombination — what Bailey refers to as "chimeras"
— one twin dies and his cells become part of the other twin.)
Twinning and
cloning simply show that what is needed for the generation of a
new individual is just this: a) the complete genetic code, either
in the two sex cells in normal conception, or in the original cell
from which a new offspring emerges (in twinning and cloning); b)
factors derived from the maternal cytoplasm in the ovum (or oocyte
in normal conception) that activate active development or growth;
and c) a suitable environment. When these three factors combine,
and not until then, a new and distinct organism is produced, its
distinctness evidenced above all by the distinct direction of its
growth, toward the mature stage of a distinct organism.
On a related
matter, Bailey refuses to abandon his claim that the factors in
ovular cytoplasm are mere environment. To our argument that the
cytoplasm is in fact a co-principle because it enters into
the constitution of the embryo, he replies that this also is true
of nourishment. But he has again shifted ground. Nourishment is
not environment. As the etymology of the word indicates, environment
remains outside. The cytoplasm is not mere environment, since it
remains within. But it also is not mere nourishment because nourishment
merely sustains, while the fusion of the somatic cell with the enucleated
ovum determines, a new direction for growth.
Bailey's recounting
of scientific facts is marred by distorting interpretations. For
example, he writes, "Once injected with egg cytoplasm [in cloning],
the somatic cell is reprogrammed and begins the process of embryonic
development." This description assumes that instead of the
production of a new organism, there is only a stimulus or triggering.
But the fundamentally new direction of growth is clear evidence
against this. The precise difference between regular cell division
(whether in mitosis or meiosis) and cloning is that in the latter
case a new organism is generated. That difference in the case of
human beings is certainly biologically significant. But it
also is morally significant, unless one makes the philosophical
error of identifying the human being with a mere consciousness or
denies the intrinsic value of the substantial reality of human beings.
Bailey says
that embryologists claim that, "as many as 50 to 80% of embryos
created via normal conception naturally never implant," and
then says that this somehow is evidence against our position. The
argument is flawed: 1) Bailey is exaggerating the figure: 45% is
the standard estimate (see Moore and Persaud, The Developing
Human); 2) many of these are not normal successful conceptions
— it is estimated that at least half are the results of incomplete
fertilizations, and thus many apparently are not whole human beings;
3) the infant death rate a century ago was higher than this
but no one suggested, nor would it be reasonable to suggest, that
this was any evidence that infants lack humanity.
From his repeated
assertions that, "Science shows" this, and "Science
shows" that, one might infer that the scientists who have looked
at this question have generally held that embryos are not human
beings, and that it is we, not Bailey, who wish to reverse a generally
accepted view. The exact opposite is the case. The standard
embryology texts state clearly that in normal cases the beginning
of a distinct human organism or human individual occurs with the
fusion of the pronuclei of the sperm and the oocyte, producing the
zygote. (See, for example, the embryology texts of: Moore and Persaud,
O'Rahilly, Larsen, Carlsen, and Gilbert.)
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