August 27, 2006
Response to Comments on Stem Cell Research--Posner
There were a number of interesting comments. I will reply to a few.
Several comments oppose federal support of medical or other research. That is a legitimate position, but it is not directly relevant to the stem cell issue. The reason is that banning federal support of stem cell research does not entail a reduction in the total federal funding of research, but merely a reallocation from stem cell research to other research.
In support of federal funding of basic research in general, as distinct from relying on state and private donations, David points out that "Almost every lab in a reputable academic institution in this country pursues multiple projects at once. Thus, scientists from those labs would have to create entirely new labs, devoid of federal funding, to perform even one experiment using stem cells."
Federal fundingof research is not ideal, because of political interference--the ban on stem cell research is only one example. More important is the overinvestment in research on AIDS, relative to the number of lives at risk, and the disproportionate investment in research on breast cancer, compared for example to research on prostate cancer. In general, though, the federal peer review process assures that NIH grants (for example) go to high-quality projects. I do not believe there is the same kind of politicized geographical dispersion that one finds in more politicized and less objective areas that federal largesse supports, such as grants by the National Endowment of the Humanities.
A number of the comments debate what seem to me purely metaphysical questions concerning when life begins, whether five-day embryos should be treated as full-fledged human beings, etc. By "metaphysical" I mean can't be resolved by reference to logic or evidence. They are matters of opinion and endless contestation, strongly influenced by religious views that cannot be verified or refuted (modern religions are careful to avoid proposing falsifiable hypotheses, such as that the world will end on September 1, 2006). I get no nourishment from such debates. I believe that upbringing, temperament, experience, emotion, and certain brute facts determine one's answers to such questions, not truth or falsity. If stem cell researh fulfills its promise, I believe that the moral objections will be swept aside, because even religious Americans are pragmatists.
I do not agree that if you think it's okay to harvest stem cells from a five-day old embryos, you've got no grounds for condemning the murder of children and adults or even the killing of a three-month old fetus. All societies draw lines in these matters; none I think considers a decision to be celibate the equivalent of murder because the decision results in extinguishing potential life. Where the lines are drawn depend ultimately, I have suggested, in our society at least, on practical considerations.
Posted by Richard Posner at 07:57 PM | Comments (4) | TrackBack (0)
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By destroying embryos you're not extinguishing potential life... you're extinguishing life. Now whether or not thats good or bad is up for debate.
Posted by Nelson at August 28, 2006 09:20 AM | direct link
"If stem cell researh fulfills its promise, I believe that the moral objections will be swept aside, because even religious Americans are pragmatists."
If torture fulfills its promise, I do not believe that moral objections will be swept aside.It is always the problem between means and ends.
Luis M. Aguirre
Posted by Luis at August 29, 2006 01:09 PM | direct link
"Google" this - "vanishing twin syndrome." There is lots of trash in here, but also hard evidence. Eggs are fertilized in a flallopian tube. In identical twins the egg splits as it enters the uterus, each egg attaching to a separate part of the womb where they nuture and divide. Both eggs can be caught with sounding equipment. Then one in many cases disappears!
If I am the survivor of a vanishing twin syndrome does that mean I killed another egg in my mother's womb in order to survive, or did I kill another human being?
Some, very preliminary research, suggests the surviving twin is left-handed. I am left-handed. Be careful if, for any metaphysical reason, you accuse me of killing my twin brother. To give me that guilt trip is not really a Christian gesture is it?
Posted by R. H. Morneau, Jr. at August 29, 2006 01:33 PM | direct link
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