4.36 Cosa dire delle cellule staminali e delle colture transgeniche?

Inseminazione artificiale, embrioni, e clonazione

Le cellule staminali sono cellule speciali che giocano un ruolo importante nello sviluppo del corpo umano. Alcune tipi di cellule staminali possono essere coltivate in laboratorio per creare tessuto che può aiutare le persone con specifiche malattie. Se questa scelta è buona dipende dall’origine delle cellule staminali.  

Ad esempio, se queste cellule sono ottenute dal cordone ombelicale, va bene: questa procedura non danneggia un essere umano. Ma un embrione, un piccolo essere umano, non deve mai essere usato per questo scopo. Tuttavia non c’è un’obiezione di fondo verso i raccolti e gli animali geneticamente prodotti, salvo che ciò sia fatto con rispetto e serva alle persone.

 

Le staminali possono essere usate per cure, ma mai a costo di un’altra vita. Possiamo usare con cautela raccolti geneticamente modificati.
The Wisdom of the Church

What is the common good?

By the common good is meant the sum total of those conditions of social life which allow people as groups and as individuals to reach their proper fulfillment. [CCCC 407]

What is involved in the common good?

The common good involves: respect for and promotion of the fundamental rights of the person, the development of the spiritual and temporal goods of persons and society, and the peace and security of all. [CCCC 408]

Where can one find the most complete realization of the common good?

The most complete realization of the common good is found in those political communities which defend and promote the good of their citizens and of intermediate groups without forgetting the universal good of the entire human family. [CCCC 409]

What is the office confided to a Bishop in a particular Church?

The bishop to whom the care of a particular Church is entrusted is the visible head and foundation of unity for that Church. For the sake of that Church, as vicar of Christ, he fulfills the office of shepherd and is assisted by his own priests and deacons. [CCCC 327]

Is it permissible to experiment on a live human being?

Scientific, psychological, or medical experiments on a live human subject are allowed only when the results that can be expected are important for human well-being and cannot be obtained otherwise. Everything, however, must take place with the free and informed consent of the subject in question.

Moreover, the experiments must not be disproportionately risky. To make human beings the subjects of research against their will is a crime. The fate of the Polish resistance fighter Dr. Wanda Poltawska, a close confidant of Pope John Paul II, reminds us what was at stake then and still is now. During the Nazi period, Wanda Poltawska was a victim of criminal human experiments in the Ravensbrück concentration camp. Later Dr. Poltawska, a psychiatrist, advocated a reform of medical ethics and was among the founding members of the Pontifical Academy for Life. [Youcat 390]

This is what the Popes say

Of course, the Church appreciates and encourages the progress of the biomedical sciences which open up unprecedented therapeutic prospects until now unknown, for example, through the use of somatic stem cells, or treatment that aims to restore fertility or cure genetic diseases. At the same time, she feels duty-bound to enlighten all consciences to the only authentic progress, namely, that scientific progress truly respect every human being, whose personal dignity must be recognized since he is created in the image of God.  [Pope Benedict XVI, To the Congregation for the Doctrine of the faith, 31 Jan. 2008]