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04-03-2003, 11:40 AM | #11 | |
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04-03-2003, 02:55 PM | #12 |
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Any thoughts of creating a human/ chimp hybrid must be stopped at all costs on moral grounds.
I have seen the evidence of the possible end results which where presented by the photographic evidence of Godless Dave, I am struggling to find out who would have the worst deal, the chimp or the other fellow? |
04-03-2003, 05:31 PM | #13 | |
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04-03-2003, 06:08 PM | #14 |
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While I have no particular problem with seeing if chimp and human gametes will combine and if a chuman zygote will go through a few cell divisions, I'm shocked (yes, shocked :-) ) that anyone would consider allowing that fetus to progress to baby stage. Even if it worked, at best you would intentionally be creating a baby with severe mental retardation and numerous other abnormalities (in that chimp intelligence, language skills, etc. would all be considered such for a human). At worst we could tack on developmental defects, sterility, etc.
You would also be violating about every informed consent rule there is as there is no way that a potential baby can give informed consent. So, I vote no on the manpanzee project (chump? chimanzee? Homopan sapitrog?). |
04-03-2003, 06:11 PM | #15 |
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Oh wait. I just re-read PZ's post and he did indeed say that he would be against bringing a manpanzee to term.
That's good, that means he's a rational guy like I thought! I, on the other hand, am evidently a poor reader. |
04-03-2003, 06:35 PM | #16 |
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I'm sorry, I misread you pz. I thought you meant bringing Manpanzees to term, which is what I was thinking of. I find the idea of a living manpanzee (i.e. one that has been brought to term) to be pretty horrifiying and Dr. Moreau-esque, sort of like intentionally creating a severely disabled child or something. Although I suppose it would make just as much sense to call it a "disabled chimp." Anyway, that is what I meant by "abomination." Not saying it's rational, it's just my immediate reaction. I suppose the result might be a unique primate that in its own way was perfectly happy, but my brain keeps parsing it as a human that has somehow been "wronged" or "damaged."
As far as the sanctity of embryos, well, I have no respect for the sanctity of zygotes, I'll certainly follow you that far. (Not sure what the strict definition of "embryo" is -- does it encompass the full 9 mos. of pregnancy or only an early part?) Anyway, no point in dragging this thread off into the 10-millionth abortion discussion... |
04-03-2003, 08:54 PM | #17 |
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Isn't the relative gestation time markedly different for chimps and humans? I remember (vaguely, so sorry if I got this all messed up) reading that human babies were born after a relatively short gestation cf chimps, meaning that human babies - their heads in particlular - are smaller, and develop rapidly once ex-utero, while baby chimps are more "complete". This may have been a key evolutionary change, allowing for bigger brains in humans. So, a hybrid would presumably follow either short or long gestation, and I can see that this would give many chances for things to get royally messed up.
[Another thought - would a hybrid, assuming it was viable, have a soul? ] |
04-03-2003, 09:31 PM | #18 | |
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04-03-2003, 10:23 PM | #20 | |
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The link doesn't seem to work so here's the article
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