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- From: sef@sef-pmax.slisp.cs.cmu.edu
- Subject: Re: Body transplants
- Message-ID: <1992Jul25.160244.123421@cs.cmu.edu>
- Date: Sat, 25 Jul 92 16:02:44 GMT
- Organization: School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon
- Nntp-Posting-Host: sef-pmax.slisp.cs.cmu.edu
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-
- From: jim@netlink.cts.com (Jim Bowery)
-
- I just saw a brief part of a show on a researcher who has been
- transplanting the bodies of primates and apparently is now in a
- position to attempt to do so with humans -- or so he believes.
- His claim is that it is actually more difficult to transplant
- limbs than it is an entire body. Why this would be so or whether
- this guy is off in left field I don't know. But the show was on
- public broadcasting and delved into the ethical issues quite
- extensively. The researcher is a devout Catholic.
-
- I saw a TV report on this guy as well, though I don't remember his name.
- He has swapped some monkeys' heads (or bodies, depending on your point of
- view) and kept the subjects alive for some time after that, in the sense
- that the brain gets the blood, nutrition, and oxygen it needs. However,
- according to the piece I saw, he had not "yet" made any serious attempt to
- make functioning neural connections between the newly-mated parts, so the
- resulting animals are totally paralyzed below the neck, and I believe that
- breathing is only possible with a respirator. Needless to say, the animal
- rights people take a dim view of the whole thing.
-
- General discussions of this sort of experiment and its morality probably
- belong on some other newsgroup than this one (unless there is more work
- going on in connecting up the nerves than was reported).
-
- -- Scott
- ===========================================================================
- Scott E. Fahlman
- School of Computer Science
- Carnegie Mellon University
- 5000 Forbes Avenue
- Pittsburgh, PA 15213
-
- Internet: sef+@cs.cmu.edu
-
-