Hypothetical Ethics
Aug. 14th, 2006 01:12 amOkay. Let's posit it's The Future. It's now possible to take any of your cells and make it think it's a stem cell, stick it in an egg shell, and get it to quick-grow into an organ of your own for transplants. But the best way to get it to grow and support it is to get it to grow a body, without a brain.
Creepy, immoral, or cool?
What if it was only part of a body, just the essential bits, no limbs or anything?
What if the rest of the body could be set up to grow parts based on other people's genes, so most everything was used?
Creepy, immoral, or cool?
What if it was only part of a body, just the essential bits, no limbs or anything?
What if the rest of the body could be set up to grow parts based on other people's genes, so most everything was used?
no subject
Date: 2006-08-14 06:02 am (UTC)If we do perfect nanodelivery systems, I can imagine old people popping pills filled with a combination of nanodocs and cloned 16-year-old versions of their personal cells. Slowly replace marrow, organs etc with younger cells, a thousand milligrams at a time. Replenish subcutaneous fats, follicles, melanin-producing cells, all kinds.
no subject
Date: 2006-08-14 03:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-08-15 03:45 am (UTC)