Read Today's Knowledge Driven News

About KDR

HOME

Articles by KDR

Canadians Should Pay NOT to be Poisoned: NDP

V for Vendetta - R for Reality

Canadian Bird Flu Pandemic Looming ?

Shill of the Week: Stephan Harper

Aspartame: The Sweetest Killer

Chicken Little Terrorist of the Week: Creating Fake Terrorists

Shill of the Week: Paul Martin

The Number 1 Reason YOU became a Slave


Bonus

HIV=AIDS - Fact of Fraud
The Real Face Of The European Union
Loose Change 2
The Masters of the Universe
Bill Hicks on the Elite
Sweet Misery

Human-animal mixing going too far, report says

World Science
November 10, 2006

Artist Dog-Human An artist's concept of what a human-dog hybrid might look like. The strange creatures are part of a sculpture by Australian artist Patricia Piccinini entitled "The Young Family," produced to spark reflection on the perils of creating human-animal mixtures.

Scientists are going too far in creating mixed human-animal organisms, a Scottish organization is warning.

The Scottish Council on Human Bioethics, a professional group based in Edinburgh, has published a report on the ethical implications of the practice in the journal Human Reproduction and Genetic Ethics. The report is online at www.schb.org.uk.

“Crossing the human species barrier is a procedure that has always fascinated humanity,” noted the report, made public Tuesday and written in light of draft legislation on human embryology being prepared by the U.K. Department of Health, to be published this summer.

Ancient Greek mythology speaks of monsters such as the Minotaur—a man with a bull’s head—and centaurs, mixtures of humans and horses.

But creatures of this nature may not remain confined to mythology for long, as scientists have begun tentatively creating mixed organisms. An array of experiments have produced animals with some human cells, for instance.

Such procedures “mix human and animal biological elements to such an extent that it questions the very concept of being entirely human,” the report said. This raises “grave and complex ethical difficulties.”

Some ethicists worry that the experiments might force society to make confounding decisions on whether, say, a human-chimp mix would have human rights. Other concerns are that such a creature could suffer from being outcast as a “monster,” from having a chimp as its biological father or mother, or from unusual health problems.

Some inter-species mixtures are powerful research tools, the report said.

This “became clear about a decade ago in a series of dramatic experiments in which small sections of brains from developing quails were taken and transplanted into the developing brains of chickens. The resulting chickens exhibited vocal trills and head bobs unique to quails, proving that the transplanted parts of the brain contained the neural circuitry for quail calls. It also offered astonishing proof that complex behaviours could be transferred across species.”

Later research has spawned human-animal creations, the report said. These usually die at the embryonic stage, but often survive if the mixtures involve only a few cells or genes transferred from one species to another.

The council cited the following examples:

Read the full article here

Broken Link? If the link to the original article is broken or has been altered you can view the article by clicking here.

Maple Leaf Footer
About KDR | | Home | | Weekly Features Archive

Weekly

Quote: CSIS Director Shill: The President is Always Right Chicken Little Terrorist: Stadium Terrorist Dumbass: Handshake Ban
Weekly Features Archive

In Depth

What Is Wrong With Canada
What Is Wrong With Canada ?


Recent 9-11 News Suppressed by the Media
Recent 9-11 News Suppressed by the Media


Aspartame: The Sweetest Killer
Aspartame: The Sweetest Killer


Number 1 Reason YOU Are a Slave
The Number 1 Reason YOU became a Slave


Liberal Party Logo Conservative Party Logo New Democrat Party Logo
Knowledge Driven Look at Your Favourite Canadian Political Parties

Archive

September
October

November 2006

29 30 31 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 01 02

Weekly Features
2006
2005


Read Today's Knowledge Driven News

About KDR

KnowledgeDrivenRevolution.com

Counter

Copyright © 2005-6 KnowledgeDrivenRevolution.com