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The Real Lessons Of Stem Cells

 

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Stem-cell scientists needed no help seeing the enormous potential of somatic-cell reprogramming. It would offer them a much easier route to the promising experiments they were after, and could also remove barriers to federal funding and make their work less controversial. Almost none of them agreed with Bush's objections to the destruction of embryos for research, and his encouragement was not the reason they pursued the new technique. But his encouragement did show that success with alternatives to embryo destruction could bring wholehearted public support, and end the political drama over their work.

In November of 2007, that work reached a very public crescendo. Two teams announced they had successfully returned human skin cells to "an embryonic-like state" without the need for embryos. It was an astonishing feat, and came faster than anyone imagined possible. Since then several further refinements of this technique have been published.

These advances have sparked enormous excitement in the field. Researchers are quick to note it is too soon to be certain if the new cells created this way are identical to embryonic stem cells, and they would still prefer to explore all available avenues, since they see no ethical problem with destroying human embryos for research. But for those who do see a problem, and seek a balance between scientific and ethical concerns, the new approach has shifted the balance dramatically, and may in time spell the end of the stem-cell debate.

But politics does not always reflect reality, and even as the facts were changing, some kept clamoring for an end to the Bush policy. Earlier this month, they got their wish: President Obama overturned Bush's rules and for the first time permitted federal dollars to support research that relies on the ongoing destruction of embryos.

The real lesson of the stem-cell debate was not on display in the president's decision. That lesson, made evident through new alternative stem-cell techniques, is that precisely because science is flexible, ethics must be clear and firm. Given proper direction from the larger society, our scientists are up to the task of finding ways to advance research without crossing crucial moral boundaries. To avoid the choice between science and ethics, we should insist on ethical science, and see the task of self-government in an age of biotechnology, in Bush's words, "as a challenge to advance medicine while meeting our solemn obligation to defend human life."

That twofold challenge will weigh heavily on the politics of the coming decades, and it will not be easy to meet. But "could it really work?" Yes, with the right policies, and the right scientific techniques, it could.

Levin is the Hertog Fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center and author, most recently, of “Imagining the Future: Science and American Democracy.”

© 2009

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: redbeard777 @ 05/19/2009 2:00:44 AM

    Excellent article. Two thumbs up for morality not interfering with true science. Usually when science collides with the truth is when it is being rushed or fudged.

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  • Posted By: dreiarossi @ 03/28/2009 10:56:20 AM

    I would like to know, please, why didn't you explain also, that the stem-cells potentialy used in research come from couples that already had a baby or more, and those stem-cells are kept for while, the couple needs to pay for it, and after these stem-cells are thrown away. Not anymore, because people on the labs are keeping it for research. Why M.Bush ad other had never tried to "save this human lifes"? "They" could been through away but not used to save others human adults lifes?

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