Embryos under the Microscope
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Embryos under the Microscope

Jane Maienschein

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eBook - ePub

Embryos under the Microscope

Jane Maienschein

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Too tiny to see with the naked eye, the human embryo was just a hypothesis until the microscope made observation of embryonic development possible. This changed forever our view of the minuscule cluster of cells that looms large in questions about the meaning of life. Embryos under the Microscope examines how our scientific understanding of the embryo has evolved from the earliest speculations of natural philosophers to today's biological engineering, with its many prospects for life-enhancing therapies. Jane Maienschein shows that research on embryos has always revealed possibilities that appear promising to some but deeply frightening to others, and she makes a persuasive case that public understanding must be informed by up-to-date scientific findings.Direct observation of embryos greatly expanded knowledge but also led to disagreements over what investigators were seeing. Biologists confirmed that embryos are living organisms undergoing rapid change and are not in any sense functioning persons. They do not feel pain or have any capacity to think until very late stages of fetal development. New information about DNA led to discoveries about embryonic regulation of genetic inheritance, as well as evolutionary relationships among species. Scientists have learned how to manipulate embryos in the lab, taking them apart, reconstructing them, and even synthesizing—practically from scratch—cells, body parts, and maybe someday entire embryos. Showing how we have learned what we now know about the biology of embryos, Maienschein changes our view of what it means to be alive.

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Información

Año
2014
ISBN
9780674369733
Categoría
Biologie
Index
AAAS (American Association for the Advancement of Science), 199, 254
abortion: social climate, 10–11, 155–156, 158–161; state regulation of, 14–15, 157–158, 282; Catholic views on, 21; and contraception, 154, 158–161. See also Roe v. Wade
achromatic microscopes, 42–43
ACT (Advanced Cell Technology), 203, 231–233
adult stem cells: hematopoietic stem cells, 102–103, 190, 204, 235; defined, 226, 235; compared to embryonic, 235, 244, 245; difficulty locating, 235–236; therapies, 236; research funding, 237, 244–245
Advanced Cell Technology (ACT), 203, 231–233
Aequorea victoria, 137
Akin, Todd, 10, 11
alleles, 112
Allen, Garland, 66, 81
Amblystoma (Ambystoma), 60
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 199, 254
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA, 2009), 248, 249
American Society for Cell Biology, 54
American Society for Reproductive Medicine, 174
American Society of Zoologists, 190
“Amphibians, In Analysis of Development” (Holtfreter), 91
animals, as proxy for humans, 193
antirejection drugs, 103
apoptosis, 186
applications of research, 220–225, 248, 255, 272
Archiv für Entwickelungsmechanik (Roux), 68
Aristotle, 2, 23, 29, 31–35, 36, 69
ARRA (American Recovery and Reinvestment Act), 248, 249
artificial insemination, 152
artificial parthenogenesis, 16, 80
Asilomar conference, 169
Association for Molecular Pathology, et al. v. Myriad Genetics, Inc., et al., 260
Atlas of Fertilization and Karyokinesis of the Ovum (Wilson), 51–53
Augustine, Saint, 20
Bacon, Francis, 272
Baluch, Mary Spaulding, 286
Barnard, Christian, 103
Barry, Martin, 42
basic science, 67, 220–222, 280, 286
Bateson, William, 113
battery-type models, 129–130
Bayh-Dole Act, 217
Bell, Eugene, 188
Bell Center for Regenerative Biology and Tissue Engineering, 188, 189
beta cells, 265
biodiversity, preservation of, 203–204
bioethics: influence of biology on, 161, 276–277; mechanistic conception of, 183; chimeras, 192–194; cloning, 198–200, 201–202; stem cell research, 202–203, 229–231, 237–238; genetic engineering, 209–210; in vitro fertilization, 230; federal organizations, 242, 243, 255; ethical principles, 255–256; synthetic biology, 255–256, 257, 267, 270–271
biogenetic law, 46–48
Biological Bulletin (Marine Biological Laboratory), 83
Biological Lectures (Marine Biological Laboratory), 83
biological sciences, 161, 166–167, 172, 204. See also synthetic biology
Biomedical Systems Research Institute (proposed), 224
biomimetic devices, 265–266
bioreactors, 261
birth control, 153–155, 158–161
Blackburn, Elizabeth H., 187
Blackmun, Harry, 156
blastocyst stage, 5, 6, 146–148, 151, 205, 227, 275
blastomeres, 6, 190
blastula stage, 125, 126
blood circulation, 35–36, 51
blood vessels, stem cells from, 264
bone marrow, stem cells from: hematopoietic stem cells, 102–103, 190, 204, 235; in adult stem cell therapies, 236; in synthetic transplants, 261, 262
bone marrow transplants, 103
Bonner, John Tyler, 185
Bonnet, Charles, 37–38
Boston Herald, 182
“bottom-up” synthetic biology approach, 256
Boveri, Theodor, 75–76, 77, 115, 116
Brachet, Jean, 184
Brenner, Sydney, 58
Briggs, Robert, 123–125, 225
“Bringing them Back to Life” (Zimmer), 204
British Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority, 194
Britten, Roy J., 128–132
Broun, Paul, 11
Brown, Lesley, 145
Brown, Louise, 145, 151
Brüstle, Oliver, 259
Bryn Mawr, 177
Burdach, Karl Friedrich, 39–40
Burrows, Montrose, 95
Bush, George W., 223, 242, 243, 248–249, 278
Bush, Vannevar, 218–219, 221
Caenorhabditis elegans, 58
California, 225, 232
Campbell, Keith, 195, 197–198
Canada, 194
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