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University Experts Weigh in on When Life Begins

When does life begin? It鈥檚 a question we鈥檝e all asked ourselves. 

As suggested by a recent , the answer to this question has tremendous scientific, legal, philosophical, medical, and legal implications. 

Ahead of the annual March for Life, 蜜桃社 faculty discuss the impact the life issue has on their work and address common misconceptions about human origins and Catholic Church teaching: 

 

 鈥淥nce you study the science of embryology, you see the human organism really begins at the moment of conception鈥t is one continuous process of development. Once students see that, then I get a very positive response about the Church鈥檚 teaching.鈥 

Paul Scherz who has earned  a doctorate in both genetics and in theology.

 

Scherz began his academic career researching embryological development, with his interest in medical ethics leading him to pursue moral theology. He currently teaches a course on philosophy of medicine for the . Sherzexplains that 鈥渢he complete unfolding of the incredible process of human development is very convincing for students鈥 as to the wisdom of the Church鈥檚 teaching. 

鈥(The embryo) has its own full genome that is distinct from the mother, set on its own developmental process that is separate from the mother, and at a certain point fetal viability occurs,鈥 said Scherz. "All of these things suggest this is a new, individual organism, although deeply interrelated in a very special way, but not merely another part of a mother." 

Scherz researches . He said that the reality that children can be conceived outside the womb, while morally objectionable, is more, evidence that an embryo from its earliest stages is separate from the mother. He explained that among the many and concerns with in-vitro fertilization (IVF) is how many embryos are disregarded and/or destroyed in the process. Scherz said both biology and theology shows us why this is wrong.

"We know that this is a separate entity, that is a human life from the very origins. We know that this is a new organism from the moment of conception and therefore destroying it would be destroying a human life,鈥 said Scherz. 

Scherz said the biological science on when life begins is clear, but people misunderstand the Catholic Church鈥檚 teaching on protecting life. 

鈥淧eople fear if the pro-life position becomes law, then (medical emergencies during) pregnancies will lead to the death of mothers. That鈥檚 never been the Catholic tradition,鈥 said Scherz, explaining that the principle of double effect can inform how to make ethical medical decisions when the life of the mother and child are in danger. 鈥淭he Catholic tradition of bioethics has the resources to respond to medical emergencies during pregnancy." 


鈥淓mbryos and fetuses are not 鈥榩otential life,鈥 but nascent human beings with the potential to mature into adults.鈥

Melissa Moschella, whose teaching and research focuses on biomedical, ethics, natural law, and the family, wrote in a .

 

鈥淒espite the clear scientific consensus that life begins at conception, this misconception is surprisingly widespread鈥t is common to hear people say that in the early stages of pregnancy the embryo or fetus is just a 鈥榗lump of cells,鈥 or to speak of abortion as the removal of 鈥榩regnancy tissue.鈥 Yet such rhetoric is ideological, not scientific, aimed at obscuring the undeniable reality that abortion kills a human being. Standard biology texts (when sperm and egg fuse), and the underlying science makes it clear that the fusion of sperm and egg results in a new human being that is genetically and functionally distinct from the mother.鈥 


 

 

 

 

When life begins is 鈥渘ot an open question for the Catholic Church"

 

Grabowski, who teaches and publishes widely on what it means to be a person created in the image and likeness of God, said Pope Francis has been 鈥渁bsolutely crystal clear on the morality of this issue,鈥 鈥渉aving an abortion is like hiring a hitman.鈥 

鈥淧ope Francis acknowledges this is a human being from the very beginning. Theologically and philosophically, you cannot have a human life that is not a person because we only exist as persons. That is who and what we are by God鈥檚 design,鈥 said Grabowski.

Grabowski said that before the development of modern embryology, many Catholic philosophers and theologians theorized that a fetus had to reach a certain stage of development before receiving a rational soul by God. However, Grabowski said 鈥渄elayed hominization鈥 was a theory and never Catholic Church teaching

鈥淭he Church never taught or defended the theory of delayed hominization. This was a theological opinion, albeit by an influential theologian,鈥 said Grabowski. 鈥淚t is true that Aquinas does entertain the Aristotelian idea of delayed hominization in his writing 鈥 the idea that an unborn child has to be formed to a certain degree before the body can be informed by a rational soul. However, Aquinas adopts Aristotle because he thinks this is the best biological and philosophical account available to him. I think with modern embryology, given his premises, Aquinas would reach different conclusions.鈥 


 

鈥淥ur students and faculty believe that all persons are deserving of respect鈥

 

Nolan says that protecting life at all stages of development from conception to natural death is central to teaching the next generation of healthcare professionals.

鈥淲e prepare our students in our belief that life begins at conception and ends at natural death and that every person possesses an innate dignity that cannot be diminished by illness and the lack of mental and physical capacity that may come with it,鈥 said Nolan.  

 

 

 

 

 


鈥淵ou don鈥檛 have to be a religious person to believe that the law should protect all human beings, regardless of their state of development.鈥

 

 

 

 

 

鈥淭he unborn child is a human being; that鈥檚 not a religious claim, that鈥檚 a biological one,鈥 said Kirk, who said such facts can inform legal arguments about what rights and responsibilities are or should be recognized under the law.

Kirk said her focus is to teach her students how to read and analyze the law.

Kirk said that this semester should be especially interesting because this is the first time she will be teaching after the U.S. Supreme Court鈥檚 Dobbs decision upended decades of precedent on abortion law. She said she鈥檚 hopeful that the national discussion will help people understand just how permissive Roe v. Wade was and to have more of a say in shaping policy. 

鈥淭here is an enormous disconnect between what people think they agree with and the reality of the law,鈥 said Kirk, referring to assistant professor of social research at the Busch School of Business 鈥檚 analyses of polling data show for the policies Roe v. Wade permitted. 

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