3.8 Article

Avoiding the potentiality trap: thinking about the moral status of synthetic embryos

Journal

MONASH BIOETHICS REVIEW
Volume 38, Issue 2, Pages 166-180

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s40592-019-00099-5

Keywords

Embryo; Biotechnology; Potentiality; Research ethics; Stem cell research; Synthetic embryo

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Research ethics committees must sometimes deliberate about objects that do not fit nicely into any existing category. This is currently the case with the gastruloid, which is a self-assembling blob of cells that resembles a human embryo. The resemblance makes it tempting to group it with other members of that kind, and thus to ask whether gastruloids really are embryos. But fitting an ambiguous object into an existing category with well-worn pathways in research ethics, like the embryo, is only a temporary fix. The bigger problem is that we no longer know what an embryo is. We haven't had a non-absurd definition of 'embryo' for several decades and without a well-defined comparison class, asking whether gastruloids belong to the morally relevant class of things we call embryos is to ask a question without an answer. What's the alternative? A better approach needs to avoid what I'll refer to as the potentiality trap and, instead, rely on the emergence of morally salient facts about gastruloids and other synthetic embryos.

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