kami
An iron homily
- Joined
- Nov 28, 2004
- Messages
- 4,265
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- N/A
First live births from artificial sperm - Times Online
This leads me to think of some of the literature I've been reading from sociologists in the last few weeks which basically contends that you can tell a society is having to reinvent what it is when the traditional language no longer fits and we have to develop entirely new kinds of words to understand things. The crux of it is that in the past these revolutions have come from agriculture, industrial technologies and communication technologies but that now reproductive technologies are going to push us to a point where we will experience a revolution as to what sexuality and gender means with contraceptives being the first of these.
Some of the hypotheticals put forth included:
So, the crux of this discussion is, do you think reproductive technologies have been the cause of a revolution in our society and do you think they will continue to do so? And what part do you think the production of female sperm and artificial sperm, as detailed in the experiments above, will play in our future?
This seems like an epic step, imo, in the development and revolution of what it means to reproduce especially in light of the Japanese creating female chicken sperm cells.Seven mouse pups, six of which survived to adulthood, were born in a laboratory in Germany after scientists fertilised eggs with sperm that had been grown from embryonic stem (ES) cells.
The births provide the strongest evidence yet that it will eventually be possible to use ES cells to treat infertile men who make no sperm of their own.
Stem cell grafts could repair malfunctioning testes, or artificial sperm could be grown outside the body for IVF, while therapeutic cloning would ensure that the ES cells used carried the patient’s own genes.
Other experiments have suggested that artificial eggs can be made in the same way, though no offspring have yet been born.
In the longer term, it may even prove possible to produce sperm from female stem cells, and eggs from male ones, allowing homosexual couples to have children that bear the genes of both parents.
This would also enable a single man or woman to provide both the sperm and eggs needed to create an embryo, so that a person could essentially mate with himself or herself.
This leads me to think of some of the literature I've been reading from sociologists in the last few weeks which basically contends that you can tell a society is having to reinvent what it is when the traditional language no longer fits and we have to develop entirely new kinds of words to understand things. The crux of it is that in the past these revolutions have come from agriculture, industrial technologies and communication technologies but that now reproductive technologies are going to push us to a point where we will experience a revolution as to what sexuality and gender means with contraceptives being the first of these.
Some of the hypotheticals put forth included:
- A woman, with an infertile husband, who used her father-in-law's sperm to fall pregnant with the question of whose child it would truly be with a still involved family.
- A nun who advocated that sisters should charitably offer their wombs in surrogacy and whether this was in keeping with their retention of chastity or even virginity in some cases.
- A parent who had undergone transition after the birth of their child and the question of what their parental identity was.
So, the crux of this discussion is, do you think reproductive technologies have been the cause of a revolution in our society and do you think they will continue to do so? And what part do you think the production of female sperm and artificial sperm, as detailed in the experiments above, will play in our future?