Shera's answer is pretty good, but I'll offer my POV as well.
SkepticalScience said:
Hmm - athon, is there a reason to be against experimenting with non-fully formed humans??
Strickly speaking, no. When we experiment with cell lines, in a way we are really dealing with non-fully formed humans. At what point does it become 'human'? In my opinion, when the 'collection of cells' adopts a form of awareness in anticipation of stimulus gathered from its environment. A very fuzzy line, I know, but it's as defined as I can say without having a discussion on what it means to be a human being.
Forgive the sci-fi'ness of this, but say we could create a human body that lacks a brain - and was just used for creating human parts for other people. Is there any reason why we should be opposed to this??
Good question; yes and no is my best answer.
No...see my reply above.
Yes, because:
a) How are you going to get an acephalic organism? Through genetic manipulation or through chemical/hormonal manipulation. Both require prior attempts to attain this level of science. What I'm saying is that in any science, failures are inevitable. I don't feel that it is moral to 'fail' in this situation, with any attempt at creating such a result.
b) Why would we ever need an acephalic 'body factory'? It's great for spec' fiction material, but totally pointless in any perceivable medical capacity. Why not aim towards using cloning technology to grow those organs as required? No need to preserve a 'sleeve' for your lifetime that way.
Or say, using our cloning technology, we create soilders that have no feelings, and can follow orders perfectly. Would it be wrong to do that??
Something in me doesn't quite like the feeling of that, but I am not sure what.
It could however, be that my feeling is wrong.
SS
Biological 'robots' might be possible, if rather sci-fi.
The sticking point is that we focus a lot on scientific advances, which in some ways are the easy parts. If left to pure science, we would be much further advanced in terms of technology than we are now. The catch is that we, as humans, are still bound by the same social rules millions of years of evolution have programmed into us. It took decades for us to accept, as a society, heart transplants and 'test tube' babies (IVF). They are now common place.
Social evolution is a lot slower than technological evolution. And that might not be a bad thing, arguably.
Another advance will be implants to provide communication and entertainment. Would you get a retinal implant to watch television, in light of modern laser therapy for sight correction? I sure would not be the first in line...but it will one day be common place to have surgery for 'entertainment', non medical reasons.
There is no scientific reason for feeling odd about reproductive cloning potential. But we are not scientific creatures by nature; we are sociological, and we must take that into account.
Athon