Does this Neanderthal man remind us of someone familiar? |
“As well as the ethical concerns of creating a neo-Neanderthal, scientists believe the resultant baby could lack immunity to modern diseases, and may not survive.”
NB: But the neo-Neanderthals brought to life by scientists in Hanoi some decades ago are still thriving. Put to lord over a small 'jungle' - "Kingdom of Wonder" made in their evolutionary image! - they are typically savage and domineering towards weaker mammals, whilst displaying insipid programmed obedience towards their masters who created them - School of Vice
Professor George Church plans to
bring our long-extinct relative back to life using artificial DNA
JOHN HALL MONDAY 21 JANUARY 2013
A Harvard professor is looking for an
"adventurous" woman to give birth to a baby Neanderthal.
It may sound like the plot of another Jurassic Park
sequel, but the request is actually part of Professor George Church’s real-life
plan to bring our long-extinct relative back to life.
Professor Church of Harvard Medical School is one of
the world’s leading geneticists and believes his Neanderthal bone-sample
analysis is now complete enough to reconstruct their DNA.
Although the 58-year-old is not certain his plan would
work, he says he is now ready to put theory into practice.
Speaking to the German magazine Der Spiegel, Professor
Church said: “Now I need an adventurous female human…It depends on a hell of a
lot of things, but I think it can be done.”
Professor Church’s plan is to create artificial
Neanderthal DNA based on the genetic code found in bone samples, then put this
DNA into stem cells.
These cells would then be injected into a human embryo
in the early stages of life, and would be strong enough to steer the embryo’s
development along Neanderthal lines rather than Sapien.
After a few days growing in a laboratory the
‘neo-Neanderthal’ embryo would be implanted into the womb of the surrogate
mother.
Professor Church is one of the scientists who helped
initiate the Human Genome Project that successfully mapped human DNA, and
believes that bringing Neanderthals back to life would have major benefits for
mankind.
Rather than the primitive brutes they are often
stereotyped as, Professor Church believes Neanderthals were highly intelligent,
perhaps even more intelligent than humans.
Although they became extinct 33,000 years ago,
Neanderthals were already using basic tools and it is believed their brains
were roughly the same size as ours.
Professor Church told Der Spiegel: “Neanderthals might
think differently than we do. They could even be more intelligent than us.”
He added: “When the time comes to deal with an
epidemic or getting off the planet, it’s conceivable that their way of thinking
could be beneficial.”
Human cloning is illegal in many countries, but as
Professor Church is theoretically dealing with a Neanderthal, not a Homo
Sapien, existing laws may not apply.
As well as the ethical concerns of creating a
neo-Neanderthal, scientists believe the resultant baby could lack immunity to
modern diseases, and may not survive.
There are further concerns that the process might lead
to deformities, and there are also obvious risks to the surrogate mother.
Bioethicist Bernard Rollin of Colorado State
University has voiced his uncertainty over how a Neanderthal would fit into the
modern world.
He said: “I don’t think it’s fair to put people...
into a circumstance where they are going to be mocked and possibly feared.”
And Philippa Taylor of the Christian Medical
Fellowship said: “It is hard to know where to begin with the ethical and safety
concerns.”
Source: Independent
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