The
interface between Science and the Law: the Human Fertilisation
and Embryology Bill, 2007-08)
Scientists
want to advance knowledge, Society wants protection
and advances. How does the law affect Science?
The
recent Parliamentary debates concerning key provisions
in the Human Fertilisation and Embryology bill highlight
continuing concerns about the respect that, as a community,
we attach to the human embryo. Ever since the Warnock
Report in the 1980s, we have insisted that we accord
the human embryo a special status and yet licences
can be (and are) issued to use human embryos for research
(including now using so-called cybrids or hybrids for
research), and human embryos can be screened and then
selected or rejected depending upon their suitability
to serve as prospective "saviour siblings". Is this
the best that we can do and what does the future hold?
More
about the Bill
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