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Of mice, jellyfish & us.


One of the great challenges of the twenty-first century will be our response to the combined power of new reproductive technologies and manipulation of the human gene. Two recent news stories illustrate the heart of the problem: scientists recognize they now face serious ethical problems but continue to do more or less nothing about them.

A New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times story (December 23, 1999) reports a successful experiment in which jellyfish jellyfish, common name for the free-swimming stage (see polyp and medusa), of certain invertebrate animals of the phylum Cnidaria (the coelenterates). The body of a jellyfish is shaped like a bell or umbrella, with a clear, jellylike material filling most of the  genes were mixed with the sperm cells of the rhesus monkey rhesus monkey: see macaque.
rhesus monkey

Sand-coloured macaque (Macaca mulatta), widespread in South and Southeast Asian forests. Rhesus monkeys are 17–25 in. (43–64 cm) long, excluding the furry 8–12-in.
. The sperm, subsequently injected into monkey eggs, bypassed the natural fertilization process, allowing the jellyfish gene to enter the monkey egg. This process produced monkey embryos carrying the jellyfish gene. How do scientists know their experiment worked? One-third of the embryos glowed when a fluorescent light was shone on them; in another experiment, eleven of fifty-seven mice born through the same technique had green-glowing tails. This is scientific progress?

Some scientists think so. These seemingly modest developments in reproductive technology may eventually pave the way for sophisticated programs of genetic engineering, ultimately with human genes. Technical difficulties remain to actually inserting a human gene, for example, into a mouse egg, or the even more humanly compatible pig egg. We are promised, however, that these techniques will help in the development of spare human organs. And someday inserting a modified gene into a human egg could reduce susceptibility to diseases such as aids or Alzheimer's. Who can doubt that when it can be done, it will be done? Progress and profits beckon beck·on  
v. beck·oned, beck·on·ing, beck·ons

v.tr.
1. To signal or summon, as by nodding or waving.

2.
.

Of course, all of this lies in the future. But not wholly, for these reproductive techniques work their way into human medicine in the form of infertility treatments. The direct insertion of a single sperm into an egg is already possible and some ten to twenty thousand efforts a year are made on human eggs. But as the jellyfish experiments showed, direct insertion of sperm into an egg provides none of the protective functions of natural fertilization that separate the sperm's outer protein coat (and extraneous matter such as viruses) from its genetic material. Who knows what children born of such techniques may have floating around as extraneous genetic or viral material? Not jellyfish genes, we hope.

Consider the second story. Remember Dolly the clone, that singular sheep and media sensation of 1997? She has been surpassed. A prize Japanese bull has been cloned from skin cells scraped from its own ear (New York Times, January 5, 2000). Four calves were produced with far greater efficiency and less expense than the cumbersome technique that produced Dolly. But they haven't gotten the attention she did-where are the baby pictures? For experiments creating cloned calves and jellyfish-enhanced monkeys have become everyday science and ho-hum media events. Yet in these stories and others like them, one thing has not changed, the invocation of ethical dilemmas.

Funny thing though, they are the same ethical dilemmas we've heard about for twenty-five years, and their invocation does not bring reflection or resolution. Ethical handwringing hand·wring·ing or hand wringing  
n.
1. Clasping and squeezing of the hands, often in distress.

2. An excessive expression of distress: handwringing by some experts over the state of the economy.
 might better describe what scientists say in stories announcing their successful experiments. More fascinating than jellyfish genes in monkey tails, then, is ethical agnosticism agnosticism (ăgnŏs`tĭsĭzəm), form of skepticism that holds that the existence of God cannot be logically proved or disproved. Among prominent agnostics have been Auguste Comte, Herbert Spencer, and T. H.  in the face of scientific advance.

The most obvious ethical dilemmas are presented in moving from animal to human genetic experimentation. What risks will it pose? Who can know before the actual experiments take place? In the face of uncertainty, who can give informed consent? Gene replacement therapy promises to cure our ills. But children given modified genes at conception may be born and raised, perhaps reaching adulthood, before the full effects of any alteration or treatment can be known. Even now, one physician who does direct insertion of a human sperm into an egg acknowledges that extraneous material may enter the egg-although no infants born as a result of this technique have yet shown a tendency to unusual diseases or conditions. Does that mean nothing is amiss?

Another physician, who describes himself as "an ethical religious man," says he will include the new information in counseling patients, but "they can decide whether they want to go forward or not." Presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 this meets his ethical obligation. The same physician also claims that he would not recommend to his patients every advance in technology, "just because there is a market for it." But are there "treatments" before physicians and their scientific colleagues work to develop them through animal experiments? And are there markets before physicians themselves offer treatments?

Down the road, cloning human organs in monkeys or pigs will present the same round of ethical handwringing. Yes, it presents risks. Once the technical barriers are breached, how can the risks to humans be fully known without actually transplanting cloned organs? Fully consenting to the risks, sick and dying people will acquiesce in the hope of renewed health and life. Who will stop them? Perhaps, at first, health insurance companies will say "no"; predictably, they will be beaten back by "compassionate" legislation. Institutional review boards in hospitals and research institutes seem ready to approve potentially effective treatments (especially for fatal conditions), leaving the risk questions to the future. And then, of course, millions even billions of dollars are being invested in these projects. Who will really say no to the market?

Is this any way to approach ethical decision Real life ethical decisions are studied in sociology and political science and psychology using very different methods than descriptive ethics in ethics (philosophy). Not ethics proper  making in matters of novel and risky experiments that will affect not just individuals, but the whole human community and the animal and plant world that sustains us?

What is all of this doing to creation? For if natural selection is part of the marvelously adaptive nature of all life on earth (see, John Haught's "Evolution and the Humility of God" on page 12), who are scientists to decide that some genes should be enhanced or modified, while others are disabled? If the process of selection and adaptation takes eons, how can we foresee the consequences of even the simplest alteration in our genetic make-up, or that of the jellyfish and rhesus monkey?

We are all original sinners, as Sidney Callahan reminds us on page 7, but do we know nothing about hubris Hubris

An arrogance due to excessive pride and an insolence toward others. A classic character flaw of a trader or investor.
 or heedlessness? If we learn nothing from the story of Adam and Eve Adam and Eve

In the Judeo-Christian and Islamic traditions, the parents of the human race. Genesis gives two versions of their creation. In the first, God creates “male and female in his own image” on the sixth day.
, can we learn something from the development of the atomic bomb atomic bomb or A-bomb, weapon deriving its explosive force from the release of atomic energy through the fission (splitting) of heavy nuclei (see nuclear energy). The first atomic bomb was produced at the Los Alamos, N.Mex.  or the overuse overuse Health care The common use of a particular intervention even when the benefits of the intervention don't justify the potential harm or cost–eg, prescribing antibiotics for a probable viral URI. Cf Misuse, Underuse.  of antibiotic medicines? Do we know nothing about the power of nature to strike back? Have we not learned that ethical questions are real questions? They require real reflection and real answers. Yes, there is medical progress to be made in genetic research, but real progress also requires us to say: Stop and think.

FATHER & SON

Send Elian Gonzalez home to his father in Cuba. What could be more obvious or compassionate? Furthermore, it is the law, not only civil law but natural law as well. The U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service Noun 1. Immigration and Naturalization Service - an agency in the Department of Justice that enforces laws and regulations for the admission of foreign-born persons to the United States
INS
 has made the right decision, and yet does not carry it out. Why not?

Attorney General Janet Reno Janet Reno (born July 21, 1938) was the first and to date only female Attorney General of the United States (1993–2001). She was nominated by President Bill Clinton on February 11, 1993, and confirmed on March 11. , having disallowed the decision of a Florida state judge to grant a custody hearing to Elian's great-uncle, allows him to petition a federal court. If the law is clear, as it seems to be, and if the INS INS
abbr.
1. Immigration and Naturalization Service

2. International News Service

Noun 1. INS
 has interpreted it correctly, as it seems to have done, what purpose is served in waiting for a federal judge to rule so? As time passes, who can doubt that the situation will become ever more painful for the boy, for his family in Cuba as well as his family in Miami.

Extortion-like protests in the streets of Miami The Streets of Miami refers to several temporary street course race circuits set up in the Miami-area. Three distinct courses have been utilized over the years:
  • Temporary street course in Tamiami Park (CART, 1985-1988)
 and demagoguery Demagoguery
Hague, Frank

(1876–1956) corrupt mayor of Jersey City, N. J., for 30 years. [Am. Hist.: NCE, 1173]

Long, Huey P.

(1893–1935) infamous “Kingfish” of Louisiana politics. [Am. Hist.
 in the corridors of Congress should have no bearing on the final outcome of this decision.

The case of Elian Gonzalez is a tragedy. His mother died trying to bring him to the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. . In a nation of immigrants, her death naturally has a deep resonance. But it shows no disregard for her sacrifice, nor any naivete na·ive·té or na·ïve·té  
n.
1. The state or quality of being inexperienced or unsophisticated, especially in being artless, credulous, or uncritical.

2. An artless, credulous, or uncritical statement or act.
 about the political life of Fidel Castro's Cuba, to say that a boy who has lost his mother is best reunited with his father.

Happy children grow up everywhere-even in Cuba.
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Title Annotation:ethics of reproductive technology and human genetic experimentation
Publication:Commonweal
Date:Jan 28, 2000
Words:1340
Previous Article:CORRESPONDENCE.
Next Article:WE'RE ALL ORIGINAL SINNERS.
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