Stem cells are the center of all growth and development. It is the center of life. Without them, there will be no human beings, animals or even bacteria. Thanks to them, we can modify and strengthen our bodies in the form of a fetus. Children are born with hereditary disorders and fear of mutation and disability plagues the dreams of people more than ever. But what if we can guarantee that children are released from disease or disability? What if we could eliminate genes that cause children's haemophilia?
In favor of embryonic stem cell research, embryonic stem cell research is Renee Reijo Pera, a professor and director of the Center for Embryonic Stem Cell Research and Education at Stanford University. William Hurlbut, a consultant professor at the Stanford University Neuroscience Institute and a member of the Bioethics Committee, believes that such research impairs human lives and is therefore immoral. RP: This is a question raised by major philosophers and theologians for centuries, from the concept of development to the concept of occurrence, to that point. Personally, my opinion is that human life is a continuum. Sperm and eggs that produce individuals are themselves living cells, are part of other people, and human life never ends and it never starts again.
Human embryonic stem cell research did not provide substantial, long-term medically verifiable results. More importantly, it is always deadly for human embryos. In contrast, adult stem cell research did not harm anyone, and achieved very promising results. However, those who support adult stem cell research and embryonic stem cell research are condemned to stop scientific advancement. How many news coverage did you spoke over the years as the Catholic Church is opposed to "stem cell research"? The Catholic Church does not oppose all stem cell research. The Catholic Church supports and promotes adult stem cell research. The Catholic Church properly opposed embryonic stem cell research. Human embryonic stem cell research is always deadly. There is no obvious difference between a human embryo and a human being, but it is a human being in the early stages of development. Extracting those stem cells is a form of embryo practice.