2008 Archive
- My Wish List for Christmas 2008
- Protecting Conscience in Healthcare
- Digitalized Decadence
- Will Obama’s Policies Reduce Abortions in America?
- Of Hope, Change and Reason
- Joe the Embryo: Considering what hangs in the balance today
- Expect Obama to Sign FOCA in the first 100 days
- Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures - 4
- The Most Important Issue--Revisited
- So what's the most important issue?
- Abortion Changes You
- An advocate for all of us
- Catholics, Human Life and the Vote
- Seventh Anniversary: 9/11 and the Current State of Jihadism
- Stem Cell News We Can't Afford to Miss
- End of Summer Reading - Father Thomas's Selections to Feed the Mind and Soul
- Critical Thinking About the Role Science is Playing in American Politics and Culture
- Conscience Protections in Healthcare
- Moral Conscience - Part III
- Moral Conscience - Part II
- Moral Conscience - Part I
- Political Responsibility - Catholic Style
- What Americans Think About Embryo Research
- Toward the New Serfdom
- America and Jihad--A Gathering Storm?
- America and Jihad--where do we stand?
- Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures - 10
- Developmental Biology
- Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures -9
- Benedict at Ground Zero
- What Will Benedict Tell America?
- When Do We Die?
- Morality and the Emerging Field of Moral Psychology
- When it is Reasonable to Say 'No' to Unreason
- Morality as Genetic Predisposition and Neurobiology
- Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures - 8
- McNihilism goes to church (when it feels like it)
- Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures - 7
- Reason in the Public Square, Part II
- Reason in the Public Square, Part I
- Just when you thought you understood
- Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures - 6
- The Many Meanings of 'Freedom' and 'Liberty'
- Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures -5 Enlightenment Culture
- Roe v. Wade at 35
- Faith, Reason and Jihad
- A Papal Appeal to Natural Law
2007 Archive
- Speaking "Rationally and Softly"
- My Wish List for Christmas 2007
- Religion and Public Life
- The Beginning of The End of the Stem Cell Wars?
- IPSCS: What the Scientists are Saying
- Eliminating Down Babies
- Of 'Moral Ecology' and the Human Embryo
- Bush Administration Mandates Definition
- Time to Get Real About Stem Cell Research
- The Age of "Savior Siblings"
- The Fate of Frozen Embryos
- What's Up With Higher Ed?
- 9/11 Jihadism and Reason
- Suffer the Children
- We’re Closer to Getting Pluripotent Cells out of Normal Adult Body Cells
- Stem Cells, the Presidential Candidates and the Bush Principles
- Atheists: A Summer to Stand Up, Be Proud, and 'Come Out.'
- Back to the Future: Eugenics
- When Science Goes Offside
- Religion vs. Science? Look More Deeply
- Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures - 10
- Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research: What if?
- Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures -9
- Yearning to Blast a Hole in the World
- What the Senate Vote Meant
- Altered Nuclear Transfer
- Alternatives to Embryo-Destructive Research
- Thoughts for Good Friday
- Embryo-Friendly Stem Cell Research
- Teach the Bible as Literature?
- Hitting Rewind II
- Another Stem Cell Fact
- Hitting Rewind
- Got Natural Law?
- Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures - 8 "God saw...And behold it was very good."
| IPSCS: What the Scientists are Saying |
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IPSCS: What the Scientists are Saying DATE: November 27, 2007 TIME: 11:40 am EST News last week that separate teams of scientists had managed to reprogram human skin cells to be the virtual functional equivalent of human embryonic stem cells, sent a shock wave through the scientific world. The reprogrammed cells—called induced pluripotent state cells (iPSCs)—are produced without damaging, destroying or even involving human embryos. After the Japanese team led by Dr. Shinya Yamanaka reported further successes in reprogramming mouse skin cells last June, no one expected that only five months later he would already be reporting on successes with human cells. But what has been perhaps most surprising, not to say amazing, is what stem cells scientists themselves—many, ardent advocates of embryonic stem cell research—have been saying about this new alternative to embryo-destructive stem cell research. First there was Dr. Ian Wilmut, the creator of Dolly the sheep, who, foreseeing the successes that were coming in reprogramming (which renders the cloning of embryos for their stem cells obsolete) announced two weeks ago that he was abandoning cloning. “Reprogramming,” he was reported to have said in the London Telegraph, “is the future of stem cell research” possessing as it does “so much more potential” than standard ESC research. Dr. Yamanaka affirmed that “Any scientist with basic technology in molecular and cell biology can do reprogramming." Dr. Doug Melton, a stalwart advocate of ESC research and of human “therapeutic” cloning affirmed in the New York Times that “anyone who is going to suggest that [reprogramming] is just a side show and that it won’t work is wrong.” And Alta Charo, a UW-Madison professor of law and bioethics, and popular secular voice on the ethics of stem cell research said the discovery “could be a game-changing event.” Then, of course, to top these and many other declarations, there was an interview last Wednesday in the New York Times with Dr. James Thomson of the University of Wisconsin at Madison, who lead the other team that reported successful reprogramming and who is himself the first scientist to isolate human embryonic stem cells, the feat that initiated the great stem cell controversy in the U.S. “Now with the new technique, which involves adding just four genes to ordinary adult skin cells,” affirmed Thomson, “it will not be long…before the stem cell wars are a distant memory.” “A decade from now,” he said, “this will be just a funny historical footnote.” Affirmations like these have led many of us to ponder whether or not we now indeed find ourselves—happily—at the end of the stem cell wars. Only time will tell. Voices to the contrary have certainly not been lacking. A chorus of voices have also been insisting that all avenues of research need to go forward, including embryo-destructive research. The reasonableness of such claims, however, has been dealt a serious blow. To the general public, the concept of ethically uncontroversial research which now holds out the same promise as human ESC research and can be used immediately in the laboratory, is not a difficult sell. As Institute senior fellows Maureen Condic and Markus Grompe affirmed in a TheWall Street Journal op-ed last Friday:
Not a hard sell to a nation that is by and large exhausted—or simply fed up—with the controversy surrounding the use of embryos for research. Add to all this the technical ease and cost-effectiveness of somatic cell reprogramming, and one cannot help but imagine a not-so-distant future in which the sad spectacle of embryo-destructive research has become for the most part—as Dr. Thomson says—a footnote in the history of science. Let’s hope so. ***
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