• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

Animal-Human Hybrids Spark Controversy

Status
Not open for further replies.

ManaByte

Gold Member
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2005/01/0125_050125_chimeras.html

Maryann Mott
National Geographic News
January 25, 2005

Scientists have begun blurring the line between human and animal by producing chimeras—a hybrid creature that's part human, part animal.

Chinese scientists at the Shanghai Second Medical University in 2003 successfully fused human cells with rabbit eggs. The embryos were reportedly the first human-animal chimeras successfully created. They were allowed to develop for several days in a laboratory dish before the scientists destroyed the embryos to harvest their stem cells.

In Minnesota last year researchers at the Mayo Clinic created pigs with human blood flowing through their bodies.

And at Stanford University in California an experiment might be done later this year to create mice with human brains.

Scientists feel that, the more humanlike the animal, the better research model it makes for testing drugs or possibly growing "spare parts," such as livers, to transplant into humans.

Watching how human cells mature and interact in a living creature may also lead to the discoveries of new medical treatments.

But creating human-animal chimeras—named after a monster in Greek mythology that had a lion's head, goat's body, and serpent's tail—has raised troubling questions: What new subhuman combination should be produced and for what purpose? At what point would it be considered human? And what rights, if any, should it have?

There are currently no U.S. federal laws that address these issues.

More at the National Geographic link.

0780619951.01.LZZZZZZZ.jpg


And mice with human brains?
001.jpg
 

Hitokage

Setec Astronomer
Human brains are massive. The rat's head would burst in the womb if allowed to develop fully.

I think they mean with human brain cells.
 

Hitokage

Setec Astronomer
MrAngryFace said:
hahaha, thanks hito for pointing out the obvious.
Considering the number of people in the forum who don't know basic biology(and if evolution threads are any indication it's plenty), it was needed. :p
 

Brannon

Member
Soon there will be sharks smart enough to invent head-controlled laser cannons, then they will be unstoppable. The end of Days is upon us...
 
But creating human-animal chimeras—named after a monster in Greek mythology that had a lion's head, goat's body, and serpent's tail—has raised troubling questions: What new subhuman combination should be produced and for what purpose? At what point would it be considered human? And what rights, if any, should it have?

There are currently no U.S. federal laws that address these issues.
We already share varying amounts of our DNA with other species. I wonder if any attempts to legally block these actions would take this into account, or if a mouse with some human feature would be considered more human-esque than a chimp.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom