The immediate product of human cloning is a human
being:
Claims to the contrary are scientifically wrong
Dianne N. Irving, M.A., Ph.D.
Chairman Bilirakis and Members of the Sub-Committee on Health and Environment,
I appreciate the invitation to testify before you today on the profound and
critically important issue of human cloning, and am grateful that you are
so diligently addressing and pursuing the information necessary upon which
to ground a clear and defensible public policy in this area.
I would like to emphasize that what I have to say today is not simply a matter
of my own opinion; nor is it a religious or theological position, nor grounded
on any "faith" or "belief" system. To the contrary, it is directly based
on fully referenced, objectively known scientific facts - scientific facts
which any one can ascertain simply by going to their local library.
The bottom-line question concerning human cloning - not just by means of
nuclear transfer, but by any other technique of cloning as well - is, "What
is the immediate product of human cloning"? If the product of human cloning
is a tomato, a head of lettuce, a frog or a giraffe, then our concerns about
using that product for destructive experimental research or for commercial
purposes would be quite different than if the product of human cloning is
a human being. And simply because we can do something technically does not
thereby make it ethical to actually do it. Utilitarian ethics would argue
that great advances could be made to cure diseases, to increase our scientific
knowledge or to reap great fortunes in the commercial market place. But even
goals agreed to be truly beneficent and genuinely good are simply not sufficient
in the determination of what is ethical research. The means used to reach
those beneficent goals must be ethical as well. If the means used involve
the harm and destruction of human beings, or the denigration of their inherent
human dignity, then such research and commercialization would be unethical.
A point of clarity first. The question as to when a human embryo, or human
being, begins, is strictly a scientific question, and should not be relegated
to bioethicists, philosophers, theologians, governmental agencies or politicians.
The answer to this question is simple. There is unquestionably a scientific
consensus that the life of every single individual human being begins at
fertilization as a single-cell human embryo (the zygote). I have included
in my written testimony scores of scientific footnotes and references, from
many different, highly acclaimed and the most commonly used human embryology
text books, and have included the xeroxed pages from a number of these text
books with my written testimony to demonstrate this scientific fact. What
is true of the product of fertilization is true of the product of human cloning.
The question as to when a human person begins is a philosophical question.
I have included for the record several of my articles discussing this at
length, demonstrating that 'personhood' must begin when the human being begins
- at fertilization (or, cloning). I will only refer briefly to the personhood
(or philosophical) issue at the end of my testimony.
Many people (including members of Congress) have been thoroughly confused
by the bioethics literature that the product of fertilization - or in this
case, the product of human cloning - is not a human embryo, a human being,
or a human person. Elaborate scientific arguments have been flooding the
bioethics literature for some years now, positing such unscientific claims
as the following.
It is argued that fertilization (or, likewise, cloning) is not the beginning
of a human embryo or of a human being; it is just a "blob" or piece of the
mother's tissues. At most what is there is only a "potential" or a "possible"
human being. Fr. Bedate and Dr. Cefalo agree, claiming that all of the genetic
information specific for a human being is not present at fertilization, and
that human embryos can give rise to teratomas or hydatidiform moles, and
therefore are not even "human" at all.
Many have argued that fertilization (or cloning) may be the beginning of
a human being, but not the beginning of a human person (a philosophical or
theological claim grounded on incorrect science). They literally invented
a new term called the "pre-embryo" to designate the product of fertilization
(and now, cloning) from fertilization to implantation (5-6 days) or the formation
of the primitive streak (14-days). What is present during this early period
is only a "potential" or a "possible" human person or individual - and
"individuality" is required, they say, before there can be personhood. For
example, Dr. Clifford Grobstein (who is an amphibian embryologist, and not
a human embryologist) and Fr. Richard McCormick, S.J. (a theologian), make
the "scientific" claim that a genetically human being is present at
fertilization, but it is not a human individual as yet (because it could
still become more than one individual), and therefore not a human person
as yet - it is just a "pre-embryo". To support this scientific myth they
make the following "scientific" claims. To begin its growth, the human pre-embryo
divides exponentially (i.e., 1, 2, 4, 16, 32, etc.). All of the outer trophoblast
cells from the 5-6 day blastocyst are discarded after birth; only the cells
from the inner embryoblast layer become the future adult. Therefore, the
5-6 day blastocyst is really a "pre-embryo", not an embryo (which doesn't
begin, they say, until about 14-days, or the formation of the primitive streak
- others argue similarly for about 3 weeks after fertilization). Further,
these early totipotent cells are only a "loose collection of cells", and
"have not decided yet how many individuals they will be". And most influential,
they claim that twinning cannot take place after 14-days, so 14-days must
be the beginning of a human individual, and therefore, of a human person.
The early human "pre-embryo", then, is not a true human embryo or a human
"individual", and therefore not a true human person yet.
This is precisely the "science", by the way, which the N.I.H. Human Embryo
Research Panel referenced in their Report to ground their conclusion that
the "pre-embryo", or "pre-implantation embryo" (a legitimate term they use
to mean the same as the "pre-embryo"), has a "reduced" moral status - and
therefore it can be used in destructive experimental research. (It is interesting
that there was not even one single human embryologist present on that N.I.H.
Panel). This is also precisely the "science" currently being used in the
cloning debates in Congress to argue that the product of cloning is only
a potential human embryo or human being, and therefore can be used in destructive
experimentation to find cures for human diseases, etc.
The Australian theologian, Fr. Norman Ford, who wrote the book, When Did
I Begin?, so influential in bioethics and currently used as a scientific
resource in the American pharmaceutical industry, agrees with the scientific
claims of Fr. McCormick and Dr. Grobstein, adding to their "science" his
own claim that full differentiation is not even completed until 14 days.
Finally, some, e.g., MacKay, Rahner, Ruff, Haring, Hans-Martin Sass, Singer
and Wells - most of whom are philosophers or theologians - argue that true
"personhood" is not present until "brain-birth", i.e., the formation of the
primitive streak, the nerve-net, the neocortex or the whole brain integrating
system.
On the contrary, a human embryo or a human being begins at fertilization
(or cloning). This human being, who is a single-cell human embryo or zygote,
is not a "potential" or "possible" human being, but is an already existing
human embryo, which is an already existing human being - with the "potential"
or "possibility" to simply grow and develop bigger and bigger. Scientifically,
there is no change in what it is, or its nature, once the single-cell human
embryo or human being is formed. One can easily verify that scientifically
as well (and therefore all arguments for delayed personhood are scientifically
negated).
The correct scientific facts about which there is a scientific consensus
are the following. Human life is biologically a continuum which has not halted
or been interrupted for thousands of years. Although this continuum may be
seen by some to be just a "process", it must be pointed out that there must
be something there which is undergoing the "process". For example, "childhood"
is a "process", yet no one would seriously argue that there is no child present
which is undergoing that process. Similarly, fertilization (or cloning) is
a process; but there is something which is undergoing that process. A human
sperm or ovum, a kidney cell, or a liver, may be said to have human "life",
but the real issue is that they are not human beings, capable themselves
of directing and sustaining the continuum of human life. One could implant
any of these in a uterus and they would simply rot. Only human beings can
direct and sustain the continuum of human life and transmit it. Once a skin
cell has been used in cloning, a change in natures has taken place. That
is, it is no longer a skin cell; it has been changed into a human being.
It no longer acts or functions as a skin cell; it now acts and functions
as a human being (we know this scientifically). This is precisely the difference
between a skin cell and the product of human cloning.
To scientifically determine if the immediate product of fertilization or
cloning is a human embryo or a human being, all one has to do is count the
number of chromosomes under a microscope, and particularly observe the functions
and activities which are present immediately at fertilization or cloning
(since scientists know that a thing acts or functions according to what it
is). Fertilization or cloning does not produce a "blob" or piece of tissue
of the mother, or a "drug". In fertilization, when the 23 chromosomes of
the sperm and the 23 chromosomes of the ovum are combined, a new, genetically
unique, living, individual, already existing single-cell human embryo or
human being (the single-cell human zygote) with 46 chromosomes (the number
and quality specific for the human species) is formed, and this human being
has the capacity itself to direct all of its further growth and development.
Although this means that the human embryo is an already existing human being,
the chromosomal make-up of the single-cell human embryo is qualitatively
different from that of either the mother or the father. That is, the genetic
identity of the human embryo is different from the genetic identity of the
tissues of the mother. The same would be true of the product of cloning,
as the genetic make-up of the new human embryo, although an already existing
human being, would be qualitatively different from the genetic make-up of
the donor "mother" (due, e.g., to crossing-over of the maternal chromosomes
during mitosis and cell division, environmental conditions, mutations, etc.).
In fertilization, the single-cell human embryo formed at fertilization is
already genetically a male or a female; in cloning, it would already be
genetically a female. In beginning its growth, the human embryo divides
asynchronously (i.e., 1, 2, 3, etc.).
Immediately specifically human enzymes and proteins are formed (not tomato,
lettuce or giraffe proteins and enzymes). Specifically human tissues and
organs are formed (tomato, lettuce or giraffe tissues or organs are not formed
- that is a scientific fact). Virtually all of the genetic information this
human being will ever have or need is present immediately at fertilization
or cloning. No new genetic information is gained or lost throughout development
- only the use of some information is lost through mechanisms such as
methylation. This original genetic information "cascades" throughout the
course of human development, determining later molecular information, tissue
and organ formation; and it includes the genetic information needed for
differentiation, totipotency (in which the cells are already expressing
differentiation) and all of the processes of human embryogenesis - sometimes
even twinning. Entities such as teratomas and hydatidiform moles do not arise
from genetically normal human embryos, but from abnormal embryos to begin
with (e.g., dispermy).
Further, the "pre-embryo" is a scientific myth. Scientifically we know that
all of the cells from the trophoblast layer are not all discarded after birth,
but many from the yolk sac and allantois are incorporated into the embryo-proper
as the early blood cells and the primordium of the primitive gut, and in
the human adult as the median umbilical ligament and blood cells. Twinning
is possible after 14-days and the formation of the primitive streak -indeed,
months after fertilization - e.g., with fetus-in-fetu twins and with Siamese
or con-joined twins.
The term "pre-embryo" has a very interesting history, but has now been rejected
by all human embryologists, including the internationally renowned human
embryologist, Ronan O'Rahilly, who himself literally developed the
internationally recognized Carnegie Stages of human embryological development.
O'Rahilly has published that the term "pre-embryo" is "scientifically inaccurate"
and erroneous, and states in his own human embryology text book that he refuses
to use the term. The N.I.H Panel - whose conclusions, and the grounding for
those conclusions, received unusually harsh responses and reviews even within
bioethics itself - gave up using the term (but retained the use of the term
"pre-implantation" embryo to mean the same as the term "pre-embryo").
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologist (A.C.O.G.), who along
with several others have marketed the term "pre-embryo" for many years, has
recently and reluctantly decided to go back to the scientifically accurate
term "embryo" for the immediate product of fertilization (or cloning). A.C.O.G.
also reluctantly agreed to drop its drive to define the "beginning of pregnancy"
as implantation, after quite a scientific outcry from within its own membership
as well as from colleagues outside of the organization. "Pregnancy" is correctly
defined scientifically as beginning at fertilization. Unfortunately, N.I.H.'s
federal OPRR regulations and Common Rule, which regulate the use of human
subjects in research, still (in several revisions since 1981) contain the
scientifically incorrect definitions of "pregnancy" as beginning at implantation
(5-6 days after fertilization), and of "fetus" as also beginning at implantation
(the fetal period actually does not begin until the ninth week after
fertilization). Keith Moore, also not a human embryologist, but often quoted
by McCormick, Grobstein and others, has agreed in writing that the term
"pre-embryo", which he had just used for the first time in the 5th edition
of his human development text book, was scientifically incorrect, and that
he would have it removed in the next printings. Even Clifford Grobstein admitted
to a scientific audience that he was using frog embryology and just calling
it human embryology.
And finally, there is no scientific physiological basis for a valid parallel
between "brain death" and "brain birth", "sentience" or self-consciousness.
Full human development, especially brain and nervous system development,
and full brain integration, and the actual exercising of what bioethicists
call "rational attributes" and "sentience" are not complete until young
adulthood.
In sum, the answer to the first question, the scientific question, is simple
and clear: the life of every human embryo and human being begins immediately
at fertilization, or at cloning. Indeed, human cloning is essentially human
embryo research. Thus cloning would be one ingenious way in which to by-pass
or circumvent the current Congressional ban on human embryo research. The
human embryo at fertilization or cloning is immediately an already existing,
new, unique, individual human being - termed by scientists the single-cell
human zygote. This is a scientific fact. And this is the way human beings
are suppose to look at this stage of development. This is not a religious,
theological or philosophical issue, nor a matter of any one's belief system
or opinion. Any one - scientist or otherwise - who claims that this is not
true or accurate, is scientifically wrong, and should be required to give
extensive scientific proofs based only on the work of nationally and
internationally recognized human embryologists - especially if such critically
important public policy is to be explicitly based on it.
It would seem to me that public policy should only be based on the correct
scientific facts. I would conclude, therefore, on scientific grounds alone,
that the cloning or commercialization of any human beings should be banned
- both publicly and privately - since human cloning and its commercialization
necessarily and immediately produces human beings (which remain human beings
whether implanted or not), and is essentially human embryo research. Human
cloning and commercialization must by definition be unethical since the means
used result in harm to and destruction of untold numbers of innocent human
beings - human beings used solely as objects for some one else's goals -
no matter how lofty those goals may be. Technology would then surely be master
of man, rather than man master of technology.
The last question is, "when does a human person begin?" As with public policy,
any philosophical analysis of personhood must begin with and be based on
the correct scientific facts. This is required for philosophical realism.
Further, a thing acts or functions according to the kind of nature it has
- or what it is. If a "human being" is a "rational animal"; if the term
"rational" must include virtually the vegetative and sensitive powers; if
all of its powers must be present together simultaneously with the body,
with no splits - then personhood must begin when the human being begins -
at fertilization (or cloning) - when the "matter" is already "appropriately
organized". This actually matches the correct science: immediately at
fertilization or cloning, specifically human enzymes and proteins are produced,
and specifically human tissues and organs are continuously developed from
fertilization or cloning on. Personhood, then, should be based on what something
is, not on how one actually thinks or feels (merely functional definitions
of a human person).
Yet other philosophical answers have been offered - based essentially on
functionalism and on bioethics' rendition of philosophical rationalism or
empiricism. The question must be, do those arguments for "delayed" personhood
square with or match the correct scientific facts; are they based on historically
correct philosophical claims, or even philosophical claims which are
theoretically or practically defensible, or logically valid and sound? Where
does this bioethics logic take us? I and many others have demonstrated that
these arguments have consistently and extensively used incorrect science,
do not match the correct scientific facts, and are often historically inaccurate
and philosophically indefensible (e.g., contain a mind/body split). In fact,
none of the conclusions of these arguments even follow logically from their
major and minor premises. It would seem that philosophical, theological or
purely political presuppositions have been imposed on the scientific data.
And if the true scientific data does not match, then it is simply changed
accordingly.
Of equal concern is where we would end up as a society if that bioethics
logic is pushed. If either "sentience" (the ability to feel pain and pleasure)
or "rational attributes" (willing, choosing, loving, self-consciousness,
the ability to relate to the world around us, etc.) are the rationale for
human "personhood", then newborns, young children, Alzheimers and Parkinson
patients, alcoholics, drug addicts, street people, runaways, the mentally
ill and retarded, the depressed, the frail elderly, comatose patients,
paraplegics and other patients with paralysis, patients in a persistent
vegetative state - perhaps even teen-agers or politicians - (to name but
a few) are not "persons" either, and thus, by the same logic, could be "disposed
of" or experimented on at will. Indeed, the Australian philosopher Peter
Singer (whose book, oddly enough, was the only reference used to ground the
N.I.H. Human Embryo Research Panel's scientific charts) has used such arguments
to justify the infanticide of normal healthy infants (because they do not
exercise high levels of "rational attributes" or "sentience" - yet the higher
primates, e.g., pigs, dogs, gorrilas, etc., do, says Singer, and therefore
he claims these animals are "persons"). Philosopher Richard Frey, correctly
following Singer's logic, has published that many adult human beings on the
above list are not persons because they do not actively exercise "rational
attributes" or "sentience"; therefore they should be substituted for the
higher primates, e.g., dogs, pigs, gorrilas, etc. - who are persons - in
destructive experimental research. Norman Fost has argued that anencephalic
newborns are "brain dead", and therefore we could take their organs for
transplantation while they are alive. He has also argued that the "cognitively
impaired" are "brain dead" (and one wonders if that means that their organs
can be taken while alive as well). And so the logic goes.
Not only scientists, but also philosophers, theologians and bioethicists
must be held to the same degree of accountability for their "expertise",
especially when their "theories" on personhood would in any way be used to
ground public policy. My guess is that they could never withstand such
Congressional scrutiny. Thank you.
|