Synthesis of CDF Instruction "Dignitas Personae"
(Text of
"Dignitatis Personae" follows this synthesis below)
VATICAN CITY, DEC. 12, 2008 - Here is the synthesis of the instruction
"Dignitas Personae" that was released today by the Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith on certain bioethical questions. It was published
in English, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese and Polish.
* * *
Regarding the Instruction
Dignitas Personae
Aim
In recent years, biomedical research has made great strides, opening
new possibilities for the treatment of disease, but also giving rise to
serious questions which had not been directly treated in the
Instruction Donum vitae (22 February 1987). A new Instruction, which is
dated 8 September 2008, the Feast of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin
Mary, seeks to provide some responses to these new bioethical
questions, as these have been the focus of expectations and concerns in
large sectors of society. In this way, the Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith seeks both to contribute "to the formation of
conscience" (n. 10) and to encourage biomedical research respectful of
the dignity of every human being and of procreation.
Title
The Instruction opens with the words Dignitas personae - the dignity of
a person, which must be recognized in every human being from conception
to natural death. This fundamental principle expresses "a great ‘yes'
to human life and must be at the center of ethical reflection on
biomedical research" (n. 1).
Value
The document is an Instruction of a doctrinal nature, published by the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and expressly approved by
the Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI. The Instruction therefore falls
within the category of documents that "participate in the ordinary
Magisterium of the successor of Peter" (Instruction Donum veritatis,
n.18), and is to be received by Catholics "with the religious assent of
their spirit" (Dignitas personae, n. 37).
Preparation
For several years, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith has
been studying new biomedical questions with a view to updating the
Instruction Donum vitae. In undertaking the examination of such new
questions, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith "has
benefited from the analysis of the Pontifical Academy for Life and has
consulted numerous experts with regard to the scientific aspects of
these questions, in order to address them with the principles of
Christian anthropology. The Encyclicals Veritatis splendor and
Evangelium vitae of John Paul II, as well as other interventions of the
Magisterium, offer clear indications with regard to both the method and
the content of the examination of the problems under consideration" (n.
2).
Intended recipients of the
document
The Instruction is meant for "all who seek the truth" (n. 3). Indeed,
in presenting principles and moral evaluations regarding biomedical
research on human life, the Catholic Church "draws upon the light both
of reason and of faith and seeks to set forth an integral vision of man
and his vocation, capable of incorporating everything that is good in
human activity, as well as in various cultural and religious traditions
which not infrequently demonstrate a great reverence for life" (n. 3).
Structure
The Instruction has three parts: "the first recalls some
anthropological, theological and ethical elements of fundamental
importance; the second addresses new problems regarding procreation;
the third examines new procedures involving the manipulation of embryos
and the human genetic patrimony" (n. 3).
First Part:
Anthropological, Theological
and Ethical Aspects of Human Life and Procreation
The two fundamental principles
"The human being is to be respected and treated as a person from the
moment of conception; and therefore from that same moment his rights as
a person must be recognized, among which in the first place is the
inviolable right of every innocent human being to life" (n. 4). "The
origin of human life has its authentic context in marriage and in the
family, where it is generated through an act which expresses the
reciprocal love between a man and a woman. Procreation which is truly
responsible vis-à-vis the child to be born must be the fruit of
marriage" (n. 6).
Faith and human dignity
"It is the Church's conviction that what is human is not only received
and respected by faith, but is also purified, elevated and perfected"
(n. 7). God has created every human being in his own image, and his Son
has made it possible for us to become children of God. "By taking the
interrelationship of these two dimensions, the human and the divine, as
the starting point, one understands better why it is that man has
unassailable value: he possesses an eternal vocation and is called to
share in the trinitarian love of the living God" (n. 8.).
Faith and married life
"These two dimensions of life, the natural and the supernatural, allow
us to understand better the sense in which the acts that permit a new
human being to come into existence, in which a man and a woman give
themselves to each other, are a reflection of trinitarian love. God,
who is love and life, has inscribed in man and woman the vocation to
share in a special way in his mystery of personal communion and in his
work as Creator and Father... The Holy Spirit who is poured out in the
sacramental celebration offers Christian couples the gift of a new
communion of love that is the living and real image of that unique
unity which makes of the Church the indivisible Mystical Body of the
Lord Jesus" (n. 9).
The Church's Magisterium and
the legitimate autonomy of science
"The Church, by expressing an ethical judgment on some developments of
recent medical research concerning man and his beginnings, does not
intervene in the area proper to medical science itself, but rather
calls everyone to ethical and social responsibility for their actions.
She reminds them that the ethical value of biomedical science is gauged
in reference to both the unconditional respect owed to every human
being at every moment of his or her existence, and the defense of the
specific character of the personal act which transmits life" (n. 10).
Second Part:
New Problems Concerning
Procreation
Techniques for assisting
fertility
Among the procedures which respond to problems of fertility are the
following:
"techniques of heterologous artificial fertilization" (n. 12): that is,
"techniques used to obtain a human conception artificially by the use
of gametes coming from at least one donor other than the spouses who
are joined in marriage" (footnote 22). "techniques of homologous
artificial fertilization" (n. 12): that is, "the technique used to
obtain a human conception using the gametes of the two spouses joined
in marriage" (footnote 23). "techniques which act as an aid to the
conjugal act and its fertility" (n. 12). "techniques aimed at removing
obstacles to natural fertilization" (n. 13). "adoption" (n. 13).
Techniques are morally permissible if they respect: "the right to life
and to physical integrity of every human being", "the unity of
marriage, which means reciprocal respect for the right within marriage
to become a father or mother only together with the other spouse" and
"the specifically human values of sexuality" (n. 12), which require
that the procreation of a new human person come about as a result of
the conjugal act specific to the love between a husband and wife.
Therefore, "techniques which act as an aid to the conjugal act and its
fertility are permitted" (n. 12). In such procedures, the "medical
intervention respects the dignity of persons when it seeks to assist
the conjugal act either in order to facilitate its performance or in
order to enable it to achieve its objective once it has been normally
performed" (n. 12). "Certainly, techniques aimed at removing obstacles
to natural fertilization... are licit" (n. 13). "Adoption should be
encouraged, promoted and facilitated so that the many children who lack
parents may receive a home... In addition, research and investment
directed at the prevention of sterility deserve encouragement (n. 13).
In vitro fertilization and
the deliberate destruction of embryos
The experience of recent years has shown that in all techniques of in
vitro fertilization "the number of embryos sacrificed is extremely
high" (n. 14). Even in the most technically advanced centers of
artificial fertilization, the number is above 80% (cf. footnote 27).
"Embryos produced in vitro which have defects are directly discarded";
a increasing number of couples "are using artificial means of
procreation in order to engage in genetic selection of their
offspring"; of the embryos which are produced in vitro "some are
transferred into the woman's uterus, while the others are frozen"; the
technique of multiple transfer in which "the number of embryos
transferred is greater than the single child desired, in the
expectation that some embryos will be lost... implies a purely
utilitarian treatment of embryos" (n. 15).
"The blithe acceptance of the enormous number of abortions involved in
the process of in vitro fertilization vividly illustrates how the
replacement of the conjugal act by a technical procedure...leads to a
weakening of the respect owed to every human being. Recognition of such
respect is, on the other hand, promoted by the intimacy of husband and
wife nourished by married love... In the face of this manipulation of
the human being in his or her embryonic state, it needs to be repeated
that God's love does not differentiate between the newly conceived
infant still in his or her mother's womb and the child or young person,
or the adult and the elderly person. God does not distinguish between
them because he sees an impression of his own image and likeness..
Therefore, the Magisterium of the Church has constantly proclaimed the
sacred and inviolable character of every human life from its conception
until its natural end" (n. 16).
Intracytoplasmic sperm
injection (ICSI)
Intracytoplasmic sperm injection is a variety of in vitro procreation
in which fertilization in the test tube does not simply "take place on
its own, but rather by means of the injection into the oocyte of a
single sperm, selected earlier, or by the injection of immature germ
cells taken from the man" (footnote 32).
This technique, which is morally illicit, causes a complete separation
between procreation and the conjugal act" (n. 17). It takes place
"outside the bodies of the couple through actions of third parties
whose competence and technical activity determine the success of the
procedure. Such fertilization entrusts the life and identity of the
embryo into the power of doctors and biologists and establishes the
domination of technology over the origin and destiny of the human
person" (n. 17).
Freezing embryos
"In order to avoid repeatedly taking oocytes from the woman's body, the
process involves a single intervention in which multiple oocytes are
taken, followed by cryopreservation of a considerable number of the
embryos conceived in vitro. In this way, should the initial attempt at
achieving pregnancy not succeed, the procedure can be repeated or
additional pregnancies attempted at a later date" (n. 18). The freezing
or cryopreservation of embryos "refers to freezing them at extremely
low temperatures, allowing long term storage" (cf. footnote 35).
"Cryopreservation is incompatible with the respect owed to human
embryos; it presupposes their production in vitro; it exposes them to
the serious risk of death or physical harm, since a high percentage
does not survive the process of freezing and thawing; it deprives them
at least temporarily of maternal reception and gestation; it places
them in a situation in which they are susceptible to further offense
and manipulation" (n. 18).
With regard to the large number of frozen embryos already in existence
the question becomes: what to do with them? All the answers that have
been proposed (use the embryos for research or for the treatment of
disease; thaw them without reactivating them and use them for research,
as if they were normal cadavers; put them at the disposal of infertile
couples as a "treatment for infertility"; allow a form of "prenatal
adoption") present real problems of various kinds. It needs to be
recognized "that the thousands of abandoned embryos represent a
situation of injustice which in fact cannot be resolved. Therefore,
John Paul II made an "appeal to the conscience of the world's
scientific authorities and in particular to doctors, that the
production of human embryos be halted, taking into account that there
seems to be no morally licit solution regarding the human destiny of
the thousands and thousands of ‘frozen' embryos which are and remain
the subjects of essential rights and should therefore be protected by
law as human persons" (n. 19).
The freezing of oocytes
"In order avoid the serious ethical problems posed by the freezing of
embryos, the freezing of oocytes has also been advanced in the area of
techniques of in vitro fertilization" (n. 20).
In this regard it needs to be stated that while the cryopreservation of
oocytes is not in itself immoral, and is employed in other medical
contexts which are not the subject of this document, when it takes
place "for the purpose of being used in artificial procreation" it is
"to be considered morally unacceptable" (n. 20).
The reduction of embryos
"Some techniques used in artificial procreation, above all the transfer
of multiple embryos into the mother's womb, have caused a significant
increase in the frequency of multiple pregnancy. This situation gives
rise in turn to the practice of so-called embryo reduction, a procedure
in which embryos or fetuses in the womb are directly exterminated" (n.
21).
"From the ethical point of view, embryo reduction is an intentional
selective abortion. It is in fact the deliberate and direct elimination
of one or more innocent human beings in the initial phase of their
existence and as such it always constitutes a grave moral disorder" (n.
21).
Preimplantation diagnosis
"Preimplantation diagnosis is a form of prenatal diagnosis connected
with techniques of artificial fertilization in which embryos formed in
vitro undergo genetic diagnosis before being transferred into a woman's
womb. Such diagnosis is done in order to ensure that only embryos free
from defects or having the desired sex or other particular qualities
are transferred" (n. 22).
"Unlike other forms of prenatal diagnosis..., diagnosis before
implantation is immediately followed by the elimination of an embryo
suspected of having genetic or chromosomal defects, or not having the
sex desired, or having other qualities that are not wanted.
Preimplantation diagnosis...is directed toward the qualitative
selection and consequent destruction of embryos, which constitutes an
act of abortion... By treating the human embryo as mere ‘laboratory
material', the concept itself of human dignity is also subjected to
alteration and discrimination...Such discrimination is immoral and must
therefore be considered legally unacceptable..." (n. 22).
New forms of interception and
contragestation
There are methods of preventing pregnancy which act after
fertilization, when the embryo is already constituted.
"Such methods are interceptive if they interfere with the embryo before
implantation" (n. 23); for example, the IUD (intrauterine device) and
the so-called ‘morning-after pills' (footnote 42). They are
"contragestative if they cause the elimination of the embryo once
implanted" (n. 23); for example, the pharmaceutical known commercially
as RU-486 (footnote 43).
Even if such interceptives may not cause an abortion every time they
are used, also because conception does not occur after every act of
sexual intercourse, it must be noted, however, that "anyone who seeks
to prevent the implantation of an embryo which may possibly have been
conceived and who therefore either requests or prescribes such a
pharmaceutical, generally intends abortion". In the case of
contragestatives "what takes place in reality is the abortion of an
embryo which has just implanted... the use of means of interception and
contragestation fall within the sin of abortion and are gravely
immoral" (n. 23).
Third Part:
New Treatments which Involve the Manipulation of
the Embryo or the Human Genetic Patrimony
Gene therapy
Gene therapy commonly refers to "techniques of genetic engineering
applied to human beings for therapeutic purposes, that is to say, with
the aim of curing genetically based diseases" (n. 25).
Somatic cell gene therapy "seeks to eliminate or reduce genetic defects
on the level of somatic cells" (n. 25). Germ line cell therapy aims "at
correcting genetic defects present in germ line cells with the purpose
of transmitting the therapeutic effects to the offspring of the
individual" (n. 25).
From the ethical point of view:
Procedures used on somatic cells for strictly therapeutic purposes "are
in principle morally licit...Given that gene therapy can involve
significant risks for the patient, the ethical principle must be
observed according to which, in order to proceed to a therapeutic
intervention, it is necessary to establish beforehand that the person
being treated will not be exposed to risks to his health or physical
integrity which are excessive or disproportionate to the gravity of the
pathology for which a cure is sought. The informed consent of the
patient or his legitimate representative is also required" (n. 26).
With regard to germ line cell therapy, "the risks connected to any
genetic manipulation are considerable and as yet not fully
controllable" and therefore "in the present state of research, it is
not morally permissible to act in a way that may cause possible harm to
the resulting progeny" (n. 26). ith regard to the possibility of using
techniques of genetic engineering to introduce alterations with the
presumed aim of improving and strengthening the gene pool, it must be
observed that such interventions would promote a "eugenic mentality"
and would introduce an "indirect social stigma with regard to people
who lack certain qualities, while privileging qualities that happen to
be appreciated by a certain culture or society; such qualities do not
constitute what is specifically human. This would be in contrast with
the fundamental truth of the equality of all human beings which is
expressed in the principle of justice, the violation of which, in the
long run, would harm peaceful coexistence among individuals... Finally
it must also be noted that in the attempt to create a new type of human
being one can recognize an ideological element in which man tries to
take the place of his Creator" (n. 27).
Human cloning
Human cloning refers to "the asexual or agametic reproduction of the
entire human organism in order to produce one or more ‘copies' which,
from a genetic perspective, are substantially identical to the single
original" (n. 28). The techniques which have been proposed for
accomplishing human cloning are artificial embryo twinning, which
"consists in the artificial separation of individual cells or groups of
cells from the embryo in the earliest stage of development... which are
then transferred into the uterus in order to obtain identical embryos
in an artificial manner" (footnote 47) and cell nuclear transfer, which
"consists in introducing a nucleus taken from an embryonic or somatic
cell into an denucleated oocyte. This is followed by stimulation of the
oocyte so that it begins to develop as an embryo" (footnote 47).
Cloning is proposed for two basic purposes: reproduction, that is, in
order to obtain the birth of a baby, and medical therapy or research.
Human cloning is "intrinsically illicit in that...it seeks to give rise
to a new human being without a connection to the act of reciprocal
self-giving between the spouses and, more radically, without any link
to sexuality. This leads to manipulation and abuses gravely injurious
to human dignity" (n. 28).
With regard to reproductive cloning, "this would impose on the
resulting individual a predetermined genetic identity, subjecting him -
as has been stated - to a form of biological slavery, from which it
would be difficult to free himself. The fact that someone would
arrogate to himself the right to determine arbitrarily the genetic
characteristics of another person represents a grave offence to the
dignity of that person as well as to the fundamental equality of all
people... In the encounter with another person, we meet a human being
who owes his existence and his proper characteristics to the love of
God, and only the love of husband and wife constitutes a mediation of
that love in conformity with the plan of the Creator and heavenly
Father" (n. 29). With regard to cloning for medical therapy or
research, it must be said that to "create embryos with the intention of
destroying them, even with the intention of helping the sick, is
completely incompatible with human dignity, because it makes the
existence of a human being at the embryonic stage nothing more than a
means to be used and destroyed. It is gravely immoral to sacrifice a
human life for therapeutic ends" (n. 30). As an alternative to
therapeutic cloning some researchers have proposed new techniques which
are presented as capable of producing stem cells of an embryonic type
without implying the destruction of true human embryos, for example, by
altered nuclear transfer (ANT) or oocyte assisted reprogramming (OAR).
Doubts still remain, however, "regarding the ontological status of the
‘product' obtained in this way" (n. 30).
The therapeutic use of stem
cells
"Stem cells are undifferentiated cells with two basic characteristics:
a) the prolonged capability of multiplying themselves while maintaining
the undifferentiated state; b) the capability of producing transitory
progenitor cells from which fully differentiated cells descend, for
example, nerve cells, muscle cells and blood cells. Once it was
experimentally verified that when stem cells are transplanted into
damaged tissue they tend to promote cell growth and the regeneration of
the tissue, new prospects opened for regenerative medicine, which have
been the subject of great interest among researchers throughout the
world" (n. 31).
For the ethical evaluation, it is necessary above all to consider the
methods of obtaining stem cells.
"Methods which do not cause serious harm to the subject from whom the
stem cells are taken are to be considered licit. This is generally the
case when tissues are taken from: a) an adult organism; b) the blood of
the umbilical cord at the time of birth; c) fetuses who have died of
natural causes" (n. 32). "The obtaining of stem cells from a living
human embryo...invariably causes the death of the embryo and is
consequently gravely illicit... In this case, research...is not truly
at the service of humanity. In fact, this research advances through the
suppression of human lives that are equal in dignity to the lives of
other human individuals and to the lives of the researchers themselves"
(n. 32). "The use of embryonic stem cells or differentiated cells
derived from them - even when these are provided by other researchers
through the destruction of embryos or when such cells are commercially
available - presents serious problems from the standpoint of
cooperation in evil and scandal" (n. 32).
Numerous studies, however, have shown that adult stem cells give more
positive results than embryonic stem cells.
Attempts at hybridization
"Recently animal oocytes have been used for reprogramming the nuclei of
human somatic cells... in order to extract embryonic stem cells from
the resulting embryos without having to use human oocytes" (n. 33).
"From the ethical standpoint, such procedures represent an offense
against the dignity of human beings on account of the admixture of
human and animal genetic elements capable of disrupting the specific
identity of man" (n. 33).
The use of human "biological
material" of illicit origin
For scientific research and for the production of vaccines or other
products, cell lines are at times used which are the result of an
illicit intervention against the life or physical integrity of a human
being.
Experimentation on human embryos "constitutes a crime against their
dignity as human beings who have a right to the same respect owed to a
child once born, just as to every person. These forms of
experimentation always constitute a grave moral disorder" (n. 34). With
regard to the use of "biological material" of illicit origin by
researchers, which has been produced apart from their research center
or which has been obtained commercially, the moral requirement "must be
safeguarded that there be no complicity in deliberate abortion and that
the risk of scandal be avoided. In this regard, the criterion of
independence as it has been formulated by some ethics committees is not
sufficient. According to this criterion, the use of ‘biological
material' of illicit origin would be ethically permissible provided
there is a clear separation between those who, on the one hand,
produce, freeze and cause the death of embryos and, on the other, the
researchers involved in scientific experimentation". It needs to be
remembered that the "duty to refuse to use such ‘biological material'
springs from the necessity to remove oneself, within the area of one's
own research, from a gravely unjust legal situation and to affirm with
clarity the value of human life. Therefore, the above-mentioned
criterion of independence is necessary, but may be ethically
insufficient" (n. 35). "Of course, within this general picture there
exist differing degrees of responsibility. Grave reasons may be morally
proportionate to justify the use of such ‘biological material'. Thus,
for example, danger to the health of children could permit parents to
use a vaccine which was developed using cell lines of illicit origin,
while keeping in mind that everyone has the duty to make known their
disagreement and to ask that their healthcare system make other types
of vaccines available. Moreover, in organizations where cell lines of
illicit origin are being utilized, the responsibility of those who make
the decision to use them is not the same as that of those who have no
voice in such a decision" (n. 35).
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Instruction "Dignitas
Personae" (December 2008)
Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith Instruction on Some Bioethical Questions
VATICAN CITY, DEC. 12, 2008 - Here is the instruction on certain
bioethical questions, titled "Dignitas Personae," published today by
the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
* * *
Introduction
1. The dignity of a person must be recognized in every human being from
conception to natural death. This fundamental principle expresses a
great “yes” to human life and must be at the center of ethical
reflection on biomedical research, which has an ever greater importance
in today’s world. The Church’s Magisterium has frequently intervened to
clarify and resolve moral questions in this area. The Instruction Donum
vitae was particularly significant.[1] And now, twenty years after its
publication, it is appropriate to bring it up to date.
The teaching of Donum vitae remains completely valid, both with regard
to the principles on which it is based and the moral evaluations which
it expresses. However, new biomedical technologies which have been
introduced in the critical area of human life and the family have given
rise to further questions, in particular in the field of research on
human embryos, the use of stem cells for therapeutic purposes, as well
as in other areas of experimental medicine. These new questions require
answers. The pace of scientific developments in this area and the
publicity they have received have raised expectations and concerns in
large sectors of public opinion. Legislative assemblies have been asked
to make decisions on these questions in order to regulate them by law;
at times, wider popular consultation has also taken place.
These developments have led the Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith to prepare a new doctrinal Instruction which addresses some
recent questions in the light of the criteria expressed in the
Instruction Donum vitae and which also examines some issues that were
treated earlier, but are in need of additional clarification.
2. In undertaking this study, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith has benefited from the analysis of the Pontifical Academy for
Life and has consulted numerous experts with regard to the scientific
aspects of these questions, in order to address them with the
principles of Christian anthropology. The Encyclicals Veritatis
splendor[2] and Evangelium vitae[3] of John Paul II, as well as other
interventions of the Magisterium, offer clear indications with regard
to both the method and the content of the examination of the problems
under consideration.
In the current multifaceted philosophical and scientific context, a
considerable number of scientists and philosophers, in the spirit of
the Hippocratic Oath, see in medical science a service to human
fragility aimed at the cure of disease, the relief of suffering and the
equitable extension of necessary care to all people. At the same time,
however, there are also persons in the world of philosophy and science
who view advances in biomedical technology from an essentially eugenic
perspective.
3. In presenting principles and moral evaluations regarding biomedical
research on human life, the Catholic Church draws upon the light both
of reason and of faith and seeks to set forth an integral vision of man
and his vocation, capable of incorporating everything that is good in
human activity, as well as in various cultural and religious traditions
which not infrequently demonstrate a great reverence for life.
The Magisterium also seeks to offer a word of support and encouragement
for the perspective on culture which considers science an invaluable
service to the integral good of the life and dignity of every human
being. The Church therefore views scientific research with hope and
desires that many Christians will dedicate themselves to the progress
of biomedicine and will bear witness to their faith in this field. She
hopes moreover that the results of such research may also be made
available in areas of the world that are poor and afflicted by disease,
so that those who are most in need will receive humanitarian
assistance. Finally, the Church seeks to draw near to every human being
who is suffering, whether in body or in spirit, in order to bring not
only comfort, but also light and hope. These give meaning to moments of
sickness and to the experience of death, which indeed are part of human
life and are present in the story of every person, opening that story
to the mystery of the Resurrection. Truly, the gaze of the Church is
full of trust because “Life will triumph: this is a sure hope for us.
Yes, life will triumph because truth, goodness, joy and true progress
are on the side of life. God, who loves life and gives it generously,
is on the side of life”.[4]
The present Instruction is addressed to the Catholic faithful and to
all who seek the truth.[5] It has three parts: the first recalls some
anthropological, theological and ethical elements of fundamental
importance; the second addresses new problems regarding procreation;
the third examines new procedures involving the manipulation of embryos
and the human genetic patrimony.
First Part: Anthropological,
Theological and Ethical Aspects of Human Life and Procreation
4. In recent decades, medical science has made significant strides in
understanding human life in its initial stages. Human biological
structures and the process of human generation are better known. These
developments are certainly positive and worthy of support when they
serve to overcome or correct pathologies and succeed in re-establishing
the normal functioning of human procreation. On the other hand, they
are negative and cannot be utilized when they involve the destruction
of human beings or when they employ means which contradict the dignity
of the person or when they are used for purposes contrary to the
integral good of man.
The body of a human being, from the very first stages of its existence,
can never be reduced merely to a group of cells. The embryonic human
body develops progressively according to a well-defined program with
its proper finality, as is apparent in the birth of every baby.
It is appropriate to recall the fundamental ethical criterion expressed
in the Instruction Donum vitae in order to evaluate all moral questions
which relate to procedures involving the human embryo: “Thus the fruit
of human generation, from the first moment of its existence, that is to
say, from the moment the zygote has formed, demands the unconditional
respect that is morally due to the human being in his bodily and
spiritual totality. The human being is to be respected and treated as a
person from the moment of conception; and therefore from that same
moment his rights as a person must be recognized, among which in the
first place is the inviolable right of every innocent human being to
life”.[6]
5. This ethical principle, which reason is capable of recognizing as
true and in conformity with the natural moral law, should be the basis
for all legislation in this area.[7] In fact, it presupposes a truth of
an ontological character, as Donum vitae demonstrated from solid
scientific evidence, regarding the continuity in development of a human
being.
If Donum vitae, in order to avoid a statement of an explicitly
philosophical nature, did not define the embryo as a person, it
nonetheless did indicate that there is an intrinsic connection between
the ontological dimension and the specific value of every human life.
Although the presence of the spiritual soul cannot be observed
experimentally, the conclusions of science regarding the human embryo
give “a valuable indication for discerning by the use of reason a
personal presence at the moment of the first appearance of a human
life: how could a human individual not be a human person?”.[8] Indeed,
the reality of the human being for the entire span of life, both before
and after birth, does not allow us to posit either a change in nature
or a gradation in moral value, since it possesses full anthropological
and ethical status. The human embryo has, therefore, from the very
beginning, the dignity proper to a person.
6. Respect for that dignity is owed to every human being because each
one carries in an indelible way his own dignity and value. The origin
of human life has its authentic context in marriage and in the family,
where it is generated through an act which expresses the reciprocal
love between a man and a woman. Procreation which is truly responsible
vis-à-vis the child to be born “must be the fruit of
marriage”.[9]
Marriage, present in all times and in all cultures, “is in reality
something wisely and providently instituted by God the Creator with a
view to carrying out his loving plan in human beings. Thus, husband and
wife, through the reciprocal gift of themselves to the other –
something which is proper and exclusive to them – bring about that
communion of persons by which they perfect each other, so as to
cooperate with God in the procreation and raising of new lives”.[10] In
the fruitfulness of married love, man and woman “make it clear that at
the origin of their spousal life there is a genuine ‘yes’, which is
pronounced and truly lived in reciprocity, remaining ever open to
life... Natural law, which is at the root of the recognition of true
equality between persons and peoples, deserves to be recognized as the
source that inspires the relationship between the spouses in their
responsibility for begetting new children. The transmission of life is
inscribed in nature and its laws stand as an unwritten norm to which
all must refer”.[11]
7. It is the Church’s conviction that what is human is not only
received and respected by faith, but is also purified, elevated and
perfected. God, after having created man in his image and likeness (cf.
Gen 1:26), described his creature as “very good” (Gen 1:31), so as to
be assumed later in the Son (cf. Jn 1:14). In the mystery of the
Incarnation, the Son of God confirmed the dignity of the body and soul
which constitute the human being. Christ did not disdain human
bodiliness, but instead fully disclosed its meaning and value: “In
reality, it is only in the mystery of the incarnate Word that the
mystery of man truly becomes clear”.12
By becoming one of us, the Son makes it possible for us to become “sons
of God” (Jn 1:12), “sharers in the divine nature” (2 Pet 1:4). This new
dimension does not conflict with the dignity of the creature which
everyone can recognize by the use of reason, but elevates it into a
wider horizon of life which is proper to God, giving us the ability to
reflect more profoundly on human life and on the acts by which it is
brought into existence.[13]
The respect for the individual human being, which reason requires, is
further enhanced and strengthened in the light of these truths of
faith: thus, we see that there is no contradiction between the
affirmation of the dignity and the affirmation of the sacredness of
human life. “The different ways in which God, acting in history, cares
for the world and for mankind are not mutually exclusive; on the
contrary, they support each other and intersect. They have their origin
and goal in the eternal, wise and loving counsel whereby God
predestines men and women ‘to be conformed to the image of his Son’
(Rom 8:29)”.[14]
8. By taking the interrelationship of these two dimensions, the human
and the divine, as the starting point, one understands better why it is
that man has unassailable value: he possesses an eternal vocation and
is called to share in the trinitarian love of the living God.
This value belongs to all without distinction. By virtue of the simple
fact of existing, every human being must be fully respected. The
introduction of discrimination with regard to human dignity based on
biological, psychological, or educational development, or based on
health-related criteria, must be excluded. At every stage of his
existence, man, created in the image and likeness of God, reflects “the
face of his Only-begotten Son… This boundless and almost
incomprehensible love of God for the human being reveals the degree to
which the human person deserves to be loved in himself, independently
of any other consideration – intelligence, beauty, health, youth,
integrity, and so forth. In short, human life is always a good, for it
‘is a manifestation of God in the world, a sign of his presence, a
trace of his glory’ (Evangelium vitae, 34)”.[15]
9. These two dimensions of life, the natural and the supernatural,
allow us to understand better the sense in which the acts that permit a
new human being to come into existence, in which a man and a woman give
themselves to each other, are a reflection of trinitarian love. “God,
who is love and life, has inscribed in man and woman the vocation to
share in a special way in his mystery of personal communion and in his
work as Creator and Father”.[16]
Christian marriage is rooted “in the natural complementarity that
exists between man and woman, and is nurtured through the personal
willingness of the spouses to share their entire life-project, what
they have and what they are: for this reason such communion is the
fruit and the sign of a profoundly human need. But in Christ the Lord,
God takes up this human need, confirms it, purifies it and elevates it,
leading it to perfection through the sacrament of matrimony: the Holy
Spirit who is poured out in the sacramental celebration offers
Christian couples the gift of a new communion of love that is the
living and real image of that unique unity which makes of the Church
the indivisible Mystical Body of the Lord Jesus”.[17]
10. The Church, by expressing an ethical judgment on some developments
of recent medical research concerning man and his beginnings, does not
intervene in the area proper to medical science itself, but rather
calls everyone to ethical and social responsibility for their actions.
She reminds them that the ethical value of biomedical science is gauged
in reference to both the unconditional respect owed to every human
being at every moment of his or her existence, and the defense of the
specific character of the personal act which transmits life. The
intervention of the Magisterium falls within its mission of
contributing to the formation of conscience, by authentically teaching
the truth which is Christ and at the same time by declaring and
confirming authoritatively the principles of the moral order which
spring from human nature itself.[18]
Second Part: New Problems
Concerning Procreation
11. In light of the principles recalled above, certain questions
regarding procreation which have emerged and have become more clear in
the years since the publication of Donum vitae can now be examined.
Techniques for assisting fertility
12. With regard to the treatment of infertility, new medical techniques
must respect three fundamental goods: a) the right to life and to
physical integrity of every human being from conception to natural
death; b) the unity of marriage, which means reciprocal respect for the
right within marriage to become a father or mother only together with
the other spouse;[19] c) the specifically human values of sexuality
which require “that the procreation of a human person be brought about
as the fruit of the conjugal act specific to the love between
spouses”.[20] Techniques which assist procreation “are not to be
rejected on the grounds that they are artificial. As such, they bear
witness to the possibilities of the art of medicine. But they must be
given a moral evaluation in reference to the dignity of the human
person, who is called to realize his vocation from God to the gift of
love and the gift of life”.[21]
In light of this principle, all techniques of heterologous artificial
fertilization,[22] as well as those techniques of homologous artificial
fertilization[23] which substitute for the conjugal act, are to be
excluded. On the other hand, techniques which act as an aid to the
conjugal act and its fertility are permitted. The Instruction Donum
vitae states: “The doctor is at the service of persons and of human
procreation. He does not have the authority to dispose of them or to
decide their fate. A medical intervention respects the dignity of
persons when it seeks to assist the conjugal act either in order to
facilitate its performance or in order to enable it to achieve its
objective once it has been normally performed”.[24] And, with regard to
homologous artificial insemination, it states: “Homologous artificial
insemination within marriage cannot be admitted except for those cases
in which the technical means is not a substitute for the conjugal act,
but serves to facilitate and to help so that the act attains its
natural purpose”.[25]
13. Certainly, techniques aimed at removing obstacles to natural
fertilization, as for example, hormonal treatments for infertility,
surgery for endometriosis, unblocking of fallopian tubes or their
surgical repair, are licit. All these techniques may be considered
authentic treatments because, once the problem causing the infertility
has been resolved, the married couple is able to engage in conjugal
acts resulting in procreation, without the physician’s action directly
interfering in that act itself. None of these treatments replaces the
conjugal act, which alone is worthy of truly responsible procreation.
In order to come to the aid of the many infertile couples who want to
have children, adoption should be encouraged, promoted and facilitated
by appropriate legislation so that the many children who lack parents
may receive a home that will contribute to their human development. In
addition, research and investment directed at the prevention of
sterility deserve encouragement.
In vitro fertilization and the deliberate destruction of embryos
14. The fact that the process of in vitro fertilization very frequently
involves the deliberate destruction of embryos was already noted in the
Instruction Donum vitae.[26] There were some who maintained that this
was due to techniques which were still somewhat imperfect. Subsequent
experience has shown, however, that all techniques of in vitro
fertilization proceed as if the human embryo were simply a mass of
cells to be used, selected and discarded.
It is true that approximately a third of women who have recourse to
artificial procreation succeed in having a baby. It should be
recognized, however, that given the proportion between the total number
of embryos produced and those eventually born, the number of embryos
sacrificed is extremely high.[27] These losses are accepted by the
practitioners of in vitro fertilization as the price to be paid for
positive results. In reality, it is deeply disturbing that research in
this area aims principally at obtaining better results in terms of the
percentage of babies born to women who begin the process, but does not
manifest a concrete interest in the right to life of each individual
embryo.
15. It is often objected that the loss of embryos is, in the majority
of cases, unintentional or that it happens truly against the will of
the parents and physicians. They say that it is a question of risks
which are not all that different from those in natural procreation; to
seek to generate new life without running any risks would in practice
mean doing nothing to transmit it. It is true that not all the losses
of embryos in the process of in vitro fertilization have the same
relationship to the will of those involved in the procedure. But it is
also true that in many cases the abandonment, destruction and loss of
embryos are foreseen and willed.
Embryos produced in vitro which have defects are directly discarded.
Cases are becoming ever more prevalent in which couples who have no
fertility problems are using artificial means of procreation in order
to engage in genetic selection of their offspring. In many countries,
it is now common to stimulate ovulation so as to obtain a large number
of oocytes which are then fertilized. Of these, some are transferred
into the woman’s uterus, while the others are frozen for future use.
The reason for multiple transfer is to increase the probability that at
least one embryo will implant in the uterus. In this technique,
therefore, the number of embryos transferred is greater than the single
child desired, in the expectation that some embryos will be lost and
multiple pregnancy may not occur. In this way, the practice of multiple
embryo transfer implies a purely utilitarian treatment of embryos. One
is struck by the fact that, in any other area of medicine, ordinary
professional ethics and the healthcare authorities themselves would
never allow a medical procedure which involved such a high number of
failures and fatalities. In fact, techniques of in vitro fertilization
are accepted based on the presupposition that the individual embryo is
not deserving of full respect in the presence of the competing desire
for offspring which must be satisfied.
This sad reality, which often goes unmentioned, is truly deplorable:
the “various techniques of artificial reproduction, which would seem to
be at the service of life and which are frequently used with this
intention, actually open the door to new threats against life”.[28]
16. The Church moreover holds that it is ethically unacceptable to
dissociate procreation from the integrally personal context of the
conjugal act:[29] human procreation is a personal act of a husband and
wife, which is not capable of substitution. The blithe acceptance of
the enormous number of abortions involved in the process of in vitro
fertilization vividly illustrates how the replacement of the conjugal
act by a technical procedure – in addition to being in contradiction
with the respect that is due to procreation as something that cannot be
reduced to mere reproduction – leads to a weakening of the respect owed
to every human being. Recognition of such respect is, on the other
hand, promoted by the intimacy of husband and wife nourished by married
love.
The Church recognizes the legitimacy of the desire for a child and
understands the suffering of couples struggling with problems of
fertility. Such a desire, however, should not override the dignity of
every human life to the point of absolute supremacy. The desire for a
child cannot justify the “production” of offspring, just as the desire
not to have a child cannot justify the abandonment or destruction of a
child once he or she has been conceived.
In reality, it seems that some researchers, lacking any ethical point
of reference and aware of the possibilities inherent in technological
progress, surrender to the logic of purely subjective desires[30] and
to economic pressures which are so strong in this area. In the face of
this manipulation of the human being in his or her embryonic state, it
needs to be repeated that “God’s love does not differentiate between
the newly conceived infant still in his or her mother’s womb and the
child or young person, or the adult and the elderly person. God does
not distinguish between them because he sees an impression of his own
image and likeness (Gen 1:26) in each one… Therefore, the Magisterium
of the Church has constantly proclaimed the sacred and inviolable
character of every human life from its conception until its natural
end”.[31]
Intracytoplasmic sperm
injection (ICSI)
17. Among the recent techniques of artificial fertilization which have
gradually assumed a particular importance is intracytoplasmic sperm
injection.[32] This technique is used with increasing frequency given
its effectiveness in overcoming various forms of male infertility.[33]
Just as in general with in vitro fertilization, of which it is a
variety, ICSI is intrinsically illicit: it causes a complete separation
between procreation and the conjugal act. Indeed ICSI takes place
“outside the bodies of the couple through actions of third parties
whose competence and technical activity determine the success of the
procedure. Such fertilization entrusts the life and identity of the
embryo into the power of doctors and biologists and establishes the
domination of technology over the origin and destiny of the human
person. Such a relationship of domination is in itself contrary to the
dignity and equality that must be common to parents and children.
Conception in vitro is the result of the technical action which
presides over fertilization. Such fertilization is neither in fact
achieved nor positively willed as the expression and fruit of a
specific act of the conjugal union”.[34]
Freezing embryos
18. One of the methods for improving the chances of success in
techniques of in vitro fertilization is the multiplication of attempts.
In order to avoid repeatedly taking oocytes from the woman’s body, the
process involves a single intervention in which multiple oocytes are
taken, followed by cryopreservation of a considerable number of the
embryos conceived in vitro.[35] In this way, should the initial attempt
at achieving pregnancy not succeed, the procedure can be repeated or
additional pregnancies attempted at a later date. In some cases, even
the embryos used in the first transfer are frozen because the hormonal
ovarian stimulation used to obtain the oocytes has certain effects
which lead physicians to wait until the woman’s physiological
conditions have returned to normal before attempting to transfer an
embryo into her womb.
Cryopreservation is incompatible with the respect owed to human
embryos; it presupposes their production in vitro; it exposes them to
the serious risk of death or physical harm, since a high percentage
does not survive the process of freezing and thawing; it deprives them
at least temporarily of maternal reception and gestation; it places
them in a situation in which they are susceptible to further offense
and manipulation.[36]
The majority of embryos that are not used remain “orphans”. Their
parents do not ask for them and at times all trace of the parents is
lost. This is why there are thousands upon thousands of frozen embryos
in almost all countries where in vitro fertilization takes place.
19. With regard to the large number of frozen embryos already in
existence the question becomes: what to do with them? Some of those who
pose this question do not grasp its ethical nature, motivated as they
are by laws in some countries that require cryopreservation centers to
empty their storage tanks periodically. Others, however, are aware that
a grave injustice has been perpetrated and wonder how best to respond
to the duty of resolving it.
Proposals to use these embryos for research or for the treatment of
disease are obviously unacceptable because they treat the embryos as
mere “biological material” and result in their destruction. The
proposal to thaw such embryos without reactivating them and use them
for research, as if they were normal cadavers, is also unacceptable.[37]
The proposal that these embryos could be put at the disposal of
infertile couples as a treatment for infertility is not ethically
acceptable for the same reasons which make artificial heterologous
procreation illicit as well as any form of surrogate motherhood;[38]
this practice would also lead to other problems of a medical,
psychological and legal nature.
It has also been proposed, solely in order to allow human beings to be
born who are otherwise condemned to destruction, that there could be a
form of “prenatal adoption”. This proposal, praiseworthy with regard to
the intention of respecting and defending human life, presents however
various problems not dissimilar to those mentioned above.
All things considered, it needs to be recognized that the thousands of
abandoned embryos represent a situation of injustice which in fact
cannot be resolved. Therefore John Paul II made an “appeal to the
conscience of the world’s scientific authorities and in particular to
doctors, that the production of human embryos be halted, taking into
account that there seems to be no morally licit solution regarding the
human destiny of the thousands and thousands of ‘frozen’ embryos which
are and remain the subjects of essential rights and should therefore be
protected by law as human persons”.[39]
The freezing of oocytes
20. In order avoid the serious ethical problems posed by the freezing
of embryos, the freezing of oocytes has also been advanced in the area
of techniques of in vitro fertilization.[40] Once a sufficient number
of oocytes has been obtained for a series of attempts at artificial
procreation, only those which are to be transferred into the mother’s
body are fertilized while the others are frozen for future
fertilization and transfer should the initial attempts not succeed.
In this regard it needs to be stated that cryopreservation of oocytes
for the purpose of being used in artificial procreation is to be
considered morally unacceptable.
The reduction of embryos
21. Some techniques used in artificial procreation, above all the
transfer of multiple embryos into the mother’s womb, have caused a
significant increase in the frequency of multiple pregnancy. This
situation gives rise in turn to the practice of so-called embryo
reduction, a procedure in which embryos or fetuses in the womb are
directly exterminated. The decision to eliminate human lives, given
that it was a human life that was desired in the first place,
represents a contradiction that can often lead to suffering and
feelings of guilt lasting for years.
From the ethical point of view, embryo reduction is an intentional
selective abortion. It is in fact the deliberate and direct elimination
of one or more innocent human beings in the initial phase of their
existence and as such it always constitutes a grave moral disorder.[41]
The ethical justifications proposed for embryo reduction are often
based on analogies with natural disasters or emergency situations in
which, despite the best intentions of all involved, it is not possible
to save everyone. Such analogies cannot in any way be the basis for an
action which is directly abortive. At other times, moral principles are
invoked, such as those of the lesser evil or double effect, which are
likewise inapplicable in this case. It is never permitted to do
something which is intrinsically illicit, not even in view of a good
result: the end does not justify the means.
Preimplantation diagnosis
22. Preimplantation diagnosis is a form of prenatal diagnosis connected
with techniques of artificial fertilization in which embryos formed in
vitro undergo genetic diagnosis before being transferred into a woman’s
womb. Such diagnosis is done in order to ensure that only embryos free
from defects or having the desired sex or other particular qualities
are transferred.
Unlike other forms of prenatal diagnosis, in which the diagnostic phase
is clearly separated from any possible later elimination and which
provide therefore a period in which a couple would be free to accept a
child with medical problems, in this case, the diagnosis before
implantation is immediately followed by the elimination of an embryo
suspected of having genetic or chromosomal defects, or not having the
sex desired, or having other qualities that are not wanted.
Preimplantation diagnosis – connected as it is with artificial
fertilization, which is itself always intrinsically illicit – is
directed toward the qualitative selection and consequent destruction of
embryos, which constitutes an act of abortion. Preimplantation
diagnosis is therefore the expression of a eugenic mentality that
“accepts selective abortion in order to prevent the birth of children
affected by various types of anomalies. Such an attitude is shameful
and utterly reprehensible, since it presumes to measure the value of a
human life only within the parameters of ‘normality’ and physical
well-being, thus opening the way to legitimizing infanticide and
euthanasia as well”.[42]
By treating the human embryo as mere “laboratory material”, the concept
itself of human dignity is also subjected to alteration and
discrimination. Dignity belongs equally to every single human being,
irrespective of his parents’ desires, his social condition, educational
formation or level of physical development. If at other times in
history, while the concept and requirements of human dignity were
accepted in general, discrimination was practiced on the basis of race,
religion or social condition, today there is a no less serious and
unjust form of discrimination which leads to the non-recognition of the
ethical and legal status of human beings suffering from serious
diseases or disabilities. It is forgotten that sick and disabled people
are not some separate category of humanity; in fact, sickness and
disability are part of the human condition and affect every individual,
even when there is no direct experience of it. Such discrimination is
immoral and must therefore be considered legally unacceptable, just as
there is a duty to eliminate cultural, economic and social barriers
which undermine the full recognition and protection of disabled or ill
people.
New forms of interception and
contragestation
23. Alongside methods of preventing pregnancy which are, properly
speaking, contraceptive, that is, which prevent conception following
from a sexual act, there are other technical means which act after
fertilization, when the embryo is already constituted, either before or
after implantation in the uterine wall. Such methods are interceptive
if they interfere with the embryo before implantation and
contragestative if they cause the elimination of the embryo once
implanted.
In order to promote wider use of interceptive methods,[43] it is
sometimes stated that the way in which they function is not
sufficiently understood. It is true that there is not always complete
knowledge of the way that different pharmaceuticals operate, but
scientific studies indicate that the effect of inhibiting implantation
is certainly present, even if this does not mean that such
interceptives cause an abortion every time they are used, also because
conception does not occur after every act of sexual intercourse. It
must be noted, however, that anyone who seeks to prevent the
implantation of an embryo which may possibly have been conceived and
who therefore either requests or prescribes such a pharmaceutical,
generally intends abortion.
When there is a delay in menstruation, a contragestative is used,[44]
usually one or two weeks after the non-occurrence of the monthly
period. The stated aim is to re-establish menstruation, but what takes
place in reality is the abortion of an embryo which has just implanted.
As is known, abortion is “the deliberate and direct killing, by
whatever means it is carried out, of a human being in the initial phase
of his or her existence, extending from conception to birth”.[45]
Therefore, the use of means of interception and contragestation fall
within the sin of abortion and are gravely immoral. Furthermore, when
there is certainty that an abortion has resulted, there are serious
penalties in canon law.[46]
Third Part: New Treatments
which Involve the Manipulation of the Embryo or the Human Genetic
Patrimony
24. Knowledge acquired in recent years has opened new perspectives for
both regenerative medicine and for the treatment of genetically based
diseases. In particular, research on embryonic stem cells and its
possible future uses have prompted great interest, even though up to
now such research has not produced effective results, as distinct from
research on adult stem cells. Because some maintain that the possible
medical advances which might result from research on embryonic stem
cells could justify various forms of manipulation and destruction of
human embryos, a whole range of questions has emerged in the area of
gene therapy, from cloning to the use of stem cells, which call for
attentive moral discernment.
Gene therapy
25. Gene therapy commonly refers to techniques of genetic engineering
applied to human beings for therapeutic purposes, that is to say, with
the aim of curing genetically based diseases, although recently gene
therapy has been attempted for diseases which are not inherited, for
cancer in particular.
In theory, it is possible to use gene therapy on two levels: somatic
cell gene therapy and germ line cell therapy. Somatic cell gene therapy
seeks to eliminate or reduce genetic defects on the level of somatic
cells, that is, cells other than the reproductive cells, but which make
up the tissue and organs of the body. It involves procedures aimed at
certain individual cells with effects that are limited to a single
person. Germ line cell therapy aims instead at correcting genetic
defects present in germ line cells with the purpose of transmitting the
therapeutic effects to the offspring of the individual. Such methods of
gene therapy, whether somatic or germ line cell therapy, can be
undertaken on a fetus before his or her birth as gene therapy in the
uterus or after birth on a child or adult.
26. For a moral evaluation the following distinctions need to be kept
in mind. Procedures used on somatic cells for strictly therapeutic
purposes are in principle morally licit. Such actions seek to restore
the normal genetic configuration of the patient or to counter damage
caused by genetic anomalies or those related to other pathologies.
Given that gene therapy can involve significant risks for the patient,
the ethical principle must be observed according to which, in order to
proceed to a therapeutic intervention, it is necessary to establish
beforehand that the person being treated will not be exposed to risks
to his health or physical integrity which are excessive or
disproportionate to the gravity of the pathology for which a cure is
sought. The informed consent of the patient or his legitimate
representative is also required.
The moral evaluation of germ line cell therapy is different. Whatever
genetic modifications are effected on the germ cells of a person will
be transmitted to any potential offspring. Because the risks connected
to any genetic manipulation are considerable and as yet not fully
controllable, in the present state of research, it is not morally
permissible to act in a way that may cause possible harm to the
resulting progeny. In the hypothesis of gene therapy on the embryo, it
needs to be added that this only takes place in the context of in vitro
fertilization and thus runs up against all the ethical objections to
such procedures. For these reasons, therefore, it must be stated that,
in its current state, germ line cell therapy in all its forms is
morally illicit.
27. The question of using genetic engineering for purposes other than
medical treatment also calls for consideration. Some have imagined the
possibility of using techniques of genetic engineering to introduce
alterations with the presumed aim of improving and strengthening the
gene pool. Some of these proposals exhibit a certain dissatisfaction or
even rejection of the value of the human being as a finite creature and
person. Apart from technical difficulties and the real and potential
risks involved, such manipulation would promote a eugenic mentality and
would lead to indirect social stigma with regard to people who lack
certain qualities, while privileging qualities that happen to be
appreciated by a certain culture or society; such qualities do not
constitute what is specifically human. This would be in contrast with
the fundamental truth of the equality of all human beings which is
expressed in the principle of justice, the violation of which, in the
long run, would harm peaceful coexistence among individuals.
Furthermore, one wonders who would be able to establish which
modifications were to be held as positive and which not, or what limits
should be placed on individual requests for improvement since it would
be materially impossible to fulfil the wishes of every single person.
Any conceivable response to these questions would, however, derive from
arbitrary and questionable criteria. All of this leads to the
conclusion that the prospect of such an intervention would end sooner
or later by harming the common good, by favouring the will of some over
the freedom of others. Finally it must also be noted that in the
attempt to create a new type of human being one can recognize an
ideological element in which man tries to take the place of his Creator.
In stating the ethical negativity of these kinds of interventions which
imply an unjust domination of man over man, the Church also recalls the
need to return to an attitude of care for people and of education in
accepting human life in its concrete historical finite nature.
Human cloning
28. Human cloning refers to the asexual or agametic reproduction of the
entire human organism in order to produce one or more “copies” which,
from a genetic perspective, are substantially identical to the single
original.[47]
Cloning is proposed for two basic purposes: reproduction, that is, in
order to obtain the birth of a baby, and medical therapy or research.
In theory, reproductive cloning would be able to satisfy certain
specific desires, for example, control over human evolution, selection
of human beings with superior qualities, pre-selection of the sex of a
child to be born, production of a child who is the “copy” of another,
or production of a child for a couple whose infertility cannot be
treated in another way. Therapeutic cloning, on the other hand, has
been proposed as a way of producing embryonic stem cells with a
predetermined genetic patrimony in order to overcome the problem of
immune system rejection; this is therefore linked to the issue of the
use of stem cells.
Attempts at cloning have given rise to genuine concern throughout the
entire world. Various national and international organizations have
expressed negative judgments on human cloning and it has been
prohibited in the great majority of nations.
Human cloning is intrinsically illicit in that, by taking the ethical
negativity of techniques of artificial fertilization to their extreme,
it seeks to give rise to a new human being without a connection to the
act of reciprocal self-giving between the spouses and, more radically,
without any link to sexuality. This leads to manipulation and abuses
gravely injurious to human dignity.[48]
29. If cloning were to be done for reproduction, this would impose on
the resulting individual a predetermined genetic identity, subjecting
him – as has been stated – to a form of biological slavery, from which
it would be difficult to free himself. The fact that someone would
arrogate to himself the right to determine arbitrarily the genetic
characteristics of another person represents a grave offense to the
dignity of that person as well as to the fundamental equality of all
people.
The originality of every person is a consequence of the particular
relationship that exists between God and a human being from the first
moment of his existence and carries with it the obligation to respect
the singularity and integrity of each person, even on the biological
and genetic levels. In the encounter with another person, we meet a
human being who owes his existence and his proper characteristics to
the love of God, and only the love of husband and wife constitutes a
mediation of that love in conformity with the plan of the Creator and
heavenly Father.
30. From the ethical point of view, so-called therapeutic cloning is
even more serious. To create embryos with the intention of destroying
them, even with the intention of helping the sick, is completely
incompatible with human dignity, because it makes the existence of a
human being at the embryonic stage nothing more than a means to be used
and destroyed. It is gravely immoral to sacrifice a human life for
therapeutic ends.
The ethical objections raised in many quarters to therapeutic cloning
and to the use of human embryos formed in vitro have led some
researchers to propose new techniques which are presented as capable of
producing stem cells of an embryonic type without implying the
destruction of true human embryos.[49] These proposals have been met
with questions of both a scientific and an ethical nature regarding
above all the ontological status of the “product” obtained in this way.
Until these doubts have been clarified, the statement of the Encyclical
Evangelium vitae needs to be kept in mind: “what is at stake is so
important that, from the standpoint of moral obligation, the mere
probability that a human person is involved would suffice to justify an
absolutely clear prohibition of any intervention aimed at killing a
human embryo”.[50]
The therapeutic use of stem
cells
31. Stem cells are undifferentiated cells with two basic
characteristics: a) the prolonged capability of multiplying themselves
while maintaining the undifferentiated state; b) the capability of
producing transitory progenitor cells from which fully differentiated
cells descend, for example, nerve cells, muscle cells and blood cells.
Once it was experimentally verified that when stem cells are
transplanted into damaged tissue they tend to promote cell growth and
the regeneration of the tissue, new prospects opened for regenerative
medicine, which have been the subject of great interest among
researchers throughout the world.
Among the sources for human stem cells which have been identified thus
far are: the embryo in the first stages of its existence, the fetus,
blood from the umbilical cord and various tissues from adult humans
(bone marrow, umbilical cord, brain, mesenchyme from various organs,
etc.) and amniotic fluid. At the outset, studies focused on embryonic
stem cells, because it was believed that only these had significant
capabilities of multiplication and differentiation. Numerous studies,
however, show that adult stem cells also have a certain versatility.
Even if these cells do not seem to have the same capacity for renewal
or the same plasticity as stem cells taken from embryos, advanced
scientific studies and experimentation indicate that these cells give
more positive results than embryonic stem cells. Therapeutic protocols
in force today provide for the use of adult stem cells and many lines
of research have been launched, opening new and promising possibilities.
32. With regard to the ethical evaluation, it is necessary to consider
the methods of obtaining stem cells as well as the risks connected with
their clinical and experimental use.
In these methods, the origin of the stem cells must be taken into
consideration. Methods which do not cause serious harm to the subject
from whom the stem cells are taken are to be considered licit. This is
generally the case when tissues are taken from: a) an adult organism;
b) the blood of the umbilical cord at the time of birth; c) fetuses who
have died of natural causes. The obtaining of stem cells from a living
human embryo, on the other hand, invariably causes the death of the
embryo and is consequently gravely illicit: “research, in such cases,
irrespective of efficacious therapeutic results, is not truly at the
service of humanity. In fact, this research advances through the
suppression of human lives that are equal in dignity to the lives of
other human individuals and to the lives of the researchers themselves.
History itself has condemned such a science in the past and will
condemn it in the future, not only because it lacks the light of God
but also because it lacks humanity”.[51]
The use of embryonic stem cells or differentiated cells derived from
them – even when these are provided by other researchers through the
destruction of embryos or when such cells are commercially available –
presents serious problems from the standpoint of cooperation in evil
and scandal.[52]
There are no moral objections to the clinical use of stem cells that
have been obtained licitly; however, the common criteria of medical
ethics need to be respected. Such use should be characterized by
scientific rigor and prudence, by reducing to the bare minimum any
risks to the patient and by facilitating the interchange of information
among clinicians and full disclosure to the public at large.
Research initiatives involving the use of adult stem cells, since they
do not present ethical problems, should be encouraged and supported.[53]
Attempts at hybridization
33. Recently animal oocytes have been used for reprogramming the nuclei
of human somatic cells – this is generally called hybrid cloning – in
order to extract embryonic stem cells from the resulting embryos
without having to use human oocytes.
From the ethical standpoint, such procedures represent an offense
against the dignity of human beings on account of the admixture of
human and animal genetic elements capable of disrupting the specific
identity of man. The possible use of the stem cells, taken from these
embryos, may also involve additional health risks, as yet unknown, due
to the presence of animal genetic material in their cytoplasm. To
consciously expose a human being to such risks is morally and ethically
unacceptable.
The use of human “biological
material” of illicit origin
34. For scientific research and for the production of vaccines or other
products, cell lines are at times used which are the result of an
illicit intervention against the life or physical integrity of a human
being. The connection to the unjust act may be either mediate or
immediate, since it is generally a question of cells which reproduce
easily and abundantly. This “material” is sometimes made available
commercially or distributed freely to research centers by governmental
agencies having this function under the law. All of this gives rise to
various ethical problems with regard to cooperation in evil and with
regard to scandal. It is fitting therefore to formulate general
principles on the basis of which people of good conscience can evaluate
and resolve situations in which they may possibly be involved on
account of their professional activity.
It needs to be remembered above all that the category of abortion “is
to be applied also to the recent forms of intervention on human embryos
which, although carried out for purposes legitimate in themselves,
inevitably involve the killing of those embryos. This is the case with
experimentation on embryos, which is becoming increasingly widespread
in the field of biomedical research and is legally permitted in some
countries… [T]he use of human embryos or fetuses as an object of
experimentation constitutes a crime against their dignity as human
beings who have a right to the same respect owed to a child once born,
just as to every person”.[54] These forms of experimentation always
constitute a grave moral disorder.[55]
35. A different situation is created when researchers use “biological
material” of illicit origin which has been produced apart from their
research center or which has been obtained commercially. The
Instruction Donum vitae formulated the general principle which must be
observed in these cases: “The corpses of human embryos and fetuses,
whether they have been deliberately aborted or not, must be respected
just as the remains of other human beings. In particular, they cannot
be subjected to mutilation or to autopsies if their death has not yet
been verified and without the consent of the parents or of the mother.
Furthermore, the moral requirements must be safeguarded that there be
no complicity in deliberate abortion and that the risk of scandal be
avoided”.[56]
In this regard, the criterion of independence as it has been formulated
by some ethics committees is not sufficient. According to this
criterion, the use of “biological material” of illicit origin would be
ethically permissible provided there is a clear separation between
those who, on the one hand, produce, freeze and cause the death of
embryos and, on the other, the researchers involved in scientific
experimentation. The criterion of independence is not sufficient to
avoid a contradiction in the attitude of the person who says that he
does not approve of the injustice perpetrated by others, but at the
same time accepts for his own work the “biological material” which the
others have obtained by means of that injustice. When the illicit
action is endorsed by the laws which regulate healthcare and scientific
research, it is necessary to distance oneself from the evil aspects of
that system in order not to give the impression of a certain toleration
or tacit acceptance of actions which are gravely unjust.[57] Any
appearance of acceptance would in fact contribute to the growing
indifference to, if not the approval of, such actions in certain
medical and political circles.
At times, the objection is raised that the above-mentioned
considerations would mean that people of good conscience involved in
research would have the duty to oppose actively all the illicit actions
that take place in the field of medicine, thus excessively broadening
their ethical responsibility. In reality, the duty to avoid cooperation
in evil and scandal relates to their ordinary professional activities,
which they must pursue in a just manner and by means of which they must
give witness to the value of life by their opposition to gravely unjust
laws. Therefore, it needs to be stated that there is a duty to refuse
to use such “biological material” even when there is no close
connection between the researcher and the actions of those who
performed the artificial fertilization or the abortion, or when there
was no prior agreement with the centers in which the artificial
fertilization took place. This duty springs from the necessity to
remove oneself, within the area of one’s own research, from a gravely
unjust legal situation and to affirm with clarity the value of human
life. Therefore, the above-mentioned criterion of independence is
necessary, but may be ethically insufficient.
Of course, within this general picture there exist differing degrees of
responsibility. Grave reasons may be morally proportionate to justify
the use of such “biological material”. Thus, for example, danger to the
health of children could permit parents to use a vaccine which was
developed using cell lines of illicit origin, while keeping in mind
that everyone has the duty to make known their disagreement and to ask
that their healthcare system make other types of vaccines available.
Moreover, in organizations where cell lines of illicit origin are being
utilized, the responsibility of those who make the decision to use them
is not the same as that of those who have no voice in such a decision.
In the context of the urgent need to mobilize consciences in favour of
life, people in the field of healthcare need to be reminded that “their
responsibility today is greatly increased. Its deepest inspiration and
strongest support lie in the intrinsic and undeniable ethical dimension
of the health-care profession, something already recognized by the
ancient and still relevant Hippocratic Oath, which requires every
doctor to commit himself to absolute respect for human life and its
sacredness”.58
Conclusion
36. There are those who say that the moral teaching of the Church
contains too many prohibitions. In reality, however, her teaching is
based on the recognition and promotion of all the gifts which the
Creator has bestowed on man: such as life, knowledge, freedom and love.
Particular appreciation is due not only to man’s intellectual
activities, but also to those which are practical, like work and
technological activities. By these, in fact, he participates in the
creative power of God and is called to transform creation by ordering
its many resources toward the dignity and wellbeing of all human beings
and of the human person in his entirety. In this way, man acts as the
steward of the value and intrinsic beauty of creation.
Human history shows, however, how man has abused and can continue to
abuse the power and capabilities which God has entrusted to him, giving
rise to various forms of unjust discrimination and oppression of the
weakest and most defenseless: the daily attacks on human life; the
existence of large regions of poverty where people are dying from
hunger and disease, excluded from the intellectual and practical
resources available in abundance in many countries; technological and
industrial development which is creating the real risk of a collapse of
the ecosystem; the use of scientific research in the areas of physics,
chemistry and biology for purposes of waging war; the many conflicts
which still divide peoples and cultures; these sadly are only some of
the most obvious signs of how man can make bad use of his abilities and
become his own worst enemy by losing the awareness of his lofty and
specific vocation to collaborate in the creative work of God.
At the same time, human history has also shown real progress in the
understanding and recognition of the value and dignity of every person
as the foundation of the rights and ethical imperatives by which human
society has been, and continues to be structured. Precisely in the name
of promoting human dignity, therefore, practices and forms of behaviour
harmful to that dignity have been prohibited. Thus, for example, there
are legal and political – and not just ethical – prohibitions of
racism, slavery, unjust discrimination and marginalization of women,
children, and ill and disabled people. Such prohibitions bear witness
to the inalienable value and intrinsic dignity of every human being and
are a sign of genuine progress in human history. In other words, the
legitimacy of every prohibition is based on the need to protect an
authentic moral good.
37. If initially human and social progress was characterized primarily
by industrial development and the production of consumer goods, today
it is distinguished by developments in information technologies,
research in genetics, medicine and biotechnologies for human benefit,
which are areas of great importance for the future of humanity, but in
which there are also evident and unacceptable abuses. “Just as a
century ago it was the working classes which were oppressed in their
fundamental rights, and the Church courageously came to their defense
by proclaiming the sacrosanct rights of the worker as person, so now,
when another category of persons is being oppressed in the fundamental
right to life, the Church feels in duty bound to speak out with the
same courage on behalf of those who have no voice. Hers is always the
evangelical cry in defense of the world’s poor, those who are
threatened and despised and whose human rights are violated”.[59]
In virtue of the Church’s doctrinal and pastoral mission, the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith has felt obliged to
reiterate both the dignity and the fundamental and inalienable rights
of every human being, including those in the initial stages of their
existence, and to state explicitly the need for protection and respect
which this dignity requires of everyone.
The fulfillment of this duty implies courageous opposition to all those
practices which result in grave and unjust discrimination against
unborn human beings, who have the dignity of a person, created like
others in the image of God. Behind every “no” in the difficult task of
discerning between good and evil, there shines a great “yes” to the
recognition of the dignity and inalienable value of every single and
unique human being called into existence.
The Christian faithful will commit themselves to the energetic
promotion of a new culture of life by receiving the contents of this
Instruction with the religious assent of their spirit, knowing that God
always gives the grace necessary to observe his commandments and that,
in every human being, above all in the least among us, one meets Christ
himself (cf. Mt 25:40). In addition, all persons of good will, in
particular physicians and researchers open to dialogue and desirous of
knowing what is true, will understand and agree with these principles
and judgments, which seek to safeguard the vulnerable condition of
human beings in the first stages of life and to promote a more human
civilization.
The Sovereign Pontiff Benedict XVI, in the Audience granted to the
undersigned Cardinal Prefect on 20 June 2008, approved the present
Instruction, adopted in the Ordinary Session of this Congregation, and
ordered its publication.
Rome, from the Offices of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith, 8 September 2008, Feast of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin
Mary.
William Card. Levada
Prefect
+ Luis F. Ladaria, S.I. Titular Archbishop of Thibica
Secretary
* * *
[1] CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Instruction Donum vitae
on respect for human life at its origins and for the dignity of
procreation (22 February 1987): AAS 80 (1988), 70-102.
[2] JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Veritatis splendor regarding
certain fundamental questions of the Church’s moral teaching (6 August
1993): AAS 85 (1993), 1133-1228.
[3] JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Evangelium vitae on the value and
inviolability of human life (25 March 1995): AAS 87 (1995), 401-522.
[4] JOHN PAUL II, Address to the participants in the Seventh Assembly
of the Pontifical Academy of Life (3 March 2001), 3: AAS 93 (2001), 446.
[5] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Fides et ratio on the
relationship between faith and reason (14 September 1998), 1: AAS 91
(1999), 5.
[6] CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Instruction Donum
vitae, I, 1: AAS 80 (1988), 79.
[7] Human rights, as Pope BENEDICT XVI has recalled, and in particular
the right to life of every human being “are based on the natural law
inscribed on human hearts and present in different cultures and
civilizations. Removing human rights from this context would mean
restricting their range and yielding to a relativistic conception,
according to which the meaning and interpretation of rights could vary
and their universality would be denied in the name of different
cultural, political, social and even religious outlooks. This great
variety of viewpoints must not be allowed to obscure the fact that not
only rights are universal, but so too is the human person, the subject
of those rights” (Address to the General Assembly of the United Nations
[18 April 2008]: AAS 100 [2008], 334).
[8] CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Instruction Donum
vitae, I, 1: AAS 80 (1988), 78-79.
[9] CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Instruction Donum
vitae, II, A, 1: AAS 80 (1988), 87.
[10] PAUL VI, Encyclical Letter Humanae vitae (25 July 1968), 8: AAS 60
(1968), 485-486.
[11] BENEDICT XVI, Address to the Participants in the International
Congress organized by the Pontifical Lateran University on the 40th
Anniversary of the Encyclical Humanae vitae, 10 May 2008: L’Osservatore
Romano, 11 May 2008, p. 1; cf. John XXIII, Encyclical Letter Mater et
magistra (15 May 1961), III: AAS 53 (1961), 447.
[12] SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL, Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et spes, 22.
[13] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Evangelium vitae, 37-38: AAS
87 (1995), 442-444.
[14] JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Veritatis splendor, 45: AAS 85
(1993), 1169.
[15] BENEDICT XVI, Address to the General Assembly of the Pontifical
Academy for Life and International Congress on “The Human Embryo in the
Pre-implantation Phase” (27 February 2006): AAS 98 (2006), 264.
[16] CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Instruction Donum
vitae, Introduction, 3: AAS 80 (1988), 75.
[17] JOHN PAUL II, Apostolic Exhortation Familiaris consortio on the
role of the Christian family in the modern world (22 September 1981),
19: AAS 74 (1982), 101-102.
[18] Cf. SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL, Declaration Dignitatis humanae, 14.
[19] Cf. CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Instruction Donum
vitae, II, A, 1: AAS 80 (1988), 87.
[20] CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Instruction Donum
vitae, II, B, 4: AAS 80 (1988), 92.
[21] CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Instruction Donum
vitae, Introduction, 3: AAS 80 (1988), 75.
[22] The term heterologous artificial fertilization or procreation
refers to “techniques used to obtain a human conception artificially by
the use of gametes coming from at least one donor other than the
spouses who are joined in marriage” (Instruction Donum vitae, II: AAS
80 [1988], 86).
[23] The term homologous artificial fertilization or procreation refers
to “the technique used to obtain a human conception using the gametes
of the two spouses joined in marriage” (Instruction Donum vitae, II:
AAS 80 [1988], 86).
[24] CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Instruction Donum
vitae, II, B, 7: AAS 80 (1988), 96; cf. PIUS XII, Address to those
taking part in the Fourth International Congress of Catholic Doctors
(29 September 1949): AAS 41 (1949), 560.
[25] CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Instruction Donum
vitae, II, B, 6: AAS 80 (1988), 94.
[26] Cf. CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Instruction Donum
vitae, II: AAS 80 (1988), 86.
[27] Currently the number of embryos sacrificed, even in the most
technically advanced centers of artificial fertilization, hovers above
80%.
[28] JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Evangelium vitae, 14: AAS 87
(1995), 416.
[29] Cf. PIUS XII, Address to the Second World Congress in Naples on
human reproduction and sterility (19 May 1956): AAS 48 (1956), 470;
PAUL VI, Encyclical Letter Humanae vitae, 12: AAS 60 (1968), 488-489;
CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Instruction Donum vitae,
II, B, 4-5: AAS 80 (1988), 90-94.
[30] An increasing number of persons, even those who are unmarried, are
having recourse to techniques of artificial reproduction in order to
have a child. These actions weaken the institution of marriage and
cause babies to be born in environments which are not conducive to
their full human development.
[31] BENEDICT XVI, Address to the General Assembly of the Pontifical
Academy for Life and International Congress on “The Human Embryo in the
Pre-implantation Phase” (27 February 2006): AAS 98 (2006), 264.
[32] Intracytoplasmic sperm injection is similar in almost every
respect to other forms of in vitro fertilization with the difference
that in this procedure fertilization in the test tube does not take
place on its own, but rather by means of the injection into the oocyte
of a single sperm, selected earlier, or by the injection of immature
germ cells taken from the man.
[33] There is ongoing discussion among specialists regarding the health
risks which this method may pose for children conceived in this way.
[34] CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Instruction Donum
vitae, II, B, 5: AAS 80 (1988), 93.
[35] Cryopreservation of embryos refers to freezing them at extremely
low temperatures, allowing long term storage.
[36] Cf. CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Instruction Donum
vitae, I, 6: AAS 80 (1988), 84-85.
[37] Cf. numbers 34-35 below.
[38] Cf. CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Instruction Donum
vitae, II, A, 1-3: AAS 80 (1988), 87-89.
[39] JOHN PAUL II, Address to the participants in the Symposium on
“Evangelium vitae and Law” and the Eleventh International Colloquium on
Roman and Canon Law (24 May 1996), 6: AAS 88 (1996), 943-944.
[40] Cryopreservation of oocytes is also indicated in other medical
contexts which are not under consideration here. The term oocyte refers
to the female germ cell (gametocyte) not penetrated by the spermatozoa.
[41] Cf. SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL, Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et spes,
n. 51; JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Evangelium vitae, 62: AAS 87
(1995), 472.
[42] JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Evangelium vitae, 63: AAS 87
(1995), 473.
[43] The interceptive methods which are best known are the IUD
(intrauterine device) and the so-called “morning¬
after pills”.
[44] The principal means of contragestation are RU-486 (Mifepristone),
synthetic prostaglandins or Methotrexate.
[45] JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Evangelium vitae, 58: AAS 87
(1995), 467.
[46] Cf. CIC, can. 1398 and CCEO, can. 1450 § 2; cf. also CIC,
can. 1323-1324. The Pontifical Commission for the uthentic
Interpretation of the Code of Canon Law declared that the canonical
concept of abortion is “the killing of the fetus in whatever way or at
whatever time from the moment of conception” (Response of 23 May 1988:
AAS 80 [1988], 1818).
[47] In the current state of knowledge, the techniques which have been
proposed for accomplishing human cloning are two: artificial embryo
twinning and cell nuclear transfer. Artificial embryo twinning consists
in the artificial separation of individual cells or groups of cells
from the embryo in the earliest stage of development. These are then
transferred into the uterus in order to obtain identical embryos in an
artificial manner. Cell nuclear transfer, or cloning properly speaking,
consists in introducing a nucleus taken from an embryonic or somatic
cell into an denucleated oocyte. This is followed by stimulation of the
oocyte so that it begins to develop as an embryo.
[48] Cf. CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Instruction Donum
vitae, I, 6: AAS 80 (1988), 84; JOHN PAUL II, Address to Members of the
Diplomatic Corps accredited to the Holy See (10 January 2005), 5: AAS
97 (2005), 153.
[49] The new techniques of this kind are, for example, the use of human
parthenogenesis, altered nuclear transfer (ANT) and oocyte assisted
reprogramming (OAR).
[50] JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Evangelium vitae, 60: AAS 87
(1995), 469.
[51] BENEDICT XVI, Address to the participants in the Symposium on the
topic: “Stem Cells: what is the future for therapy?” organized by the
Pontifical Academy for Life (16 September 2006): AAS 98 (2006), 694.
[52] Cf. numbers 34-35 below.
[53] Cf. BENEDICT XVI, Address to the participants in the Symposium on
the topic: “Stem Cells: what is the future for therapy?” organized by
the Pontifical Academy for Life (16 September 2006): AAS 98 (2006),
693-695.
[54] JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Evangelium vitae, 63: AAS 87
(1995), 472-473.
[55] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Evangelium vitae, 62: AAS 87
(1995), 472.
[56] CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH, Instruction Donum
vitae, I, 4: AAS 80 (1988), 83.
[57] Cf. JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Evangelium vitae, 73: AAS 87
(1995), 486: “Abortion and euthanasia are thus crimes which no human
law can claim to legitimize. There is no obligation in conscience to
obey such laws; instead there is a grave and clear obligation to oppose
them by conscientious objection”. The right of conscientious objection,
as an expression of the right to freedom of conscience, should be
protected by law.
[58] JOHN PAUL II, Encyclical Letter Evangelium vitae, 63: AAS 89
(1995), 502.
[59] JOHN PAUL II, Letter to all the Bishops on “The Gospel of Life”
(19 May 1991): AAS 84 (1992), 319.
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