Researchers are blurring the lines of what it means to be human, so do our laws need to change, asks Jessica Hamzelou


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1. I, human


1. I, human


Researchers are blurring the lines of what it means to be human, so do our laws need to change, asks Jessica Hamzelou

Last year, researchers in China announced they had inserted a human brain gene into monkeys. These 11 monkeys outperformed typical monkeys in tests of short-term memory, and their brain development more closely resembled that of humans. Are these animals still fully monkeys? Or are they something else? Something human?


Plenty of other experiments have blurred the line between what is human and what isn’t.


Research teams have created pigs with human genes. Clumps of human brain cells have been grown in dishes, and the cells can communicate with each other. Then there are “synthetic human entities with embryo-like features” – structures made from human stem cells that look like early embryos.

Should all these entities be protected by law in the same ways humans or human tissues are? Some researchers think so, and are proposing a new legal definition for such entities: “substantially human”. If the entity is more human than not, it should be granted human rights, they say. But this raises questions as to how exactly we define humanness, and what that means for entities that fall outside that definition.


It is only a matter of time before we will be forced to decide, say Bartha Knoppers at McGill University in Montreal and Hank Greely at Stanford University in California. “At some point, courts will be faced with the questions: is this tissue human or not? Are these remains human or not? Is this living organism in front of us human or not?” says Greely.


He and Knoppers suggest that the term substantially human could be applied in cases where the line is blurred. “It means that just because something is not 100 per cent traditional human, he or she should still be viewed as human for purposes of human protections,” says Greely


The pair are being intentionally vague. Whether an entity is substantially human or not should be a judgement call to be made by individual countries. The decision could be influenced by a nation’s culture and values, in the same way that the law uses terms like “unreasonable” or “best interests” without precisely defining them, they say.


Others think we need firmer guidelines. “Rules that include the word ‘substantially’ are never fully satisfying,” says Jeantine Lunshof at Harvard University.


Inevitably, some will want to come up with a test of – or at least a guide to – humanness.


One starting point might be the genome. Our genes certainly make us human, in terms of
coding for human features. But when we take a closer look, there is a lot of similarity between a human genome and that of a chimp, for example – or other animals, for that matter. We share 97.5 per cent of our genes with mice, according to one estimate.

However, genes alone can’t determine legal status. Embryos are genetically human, but in most countries an early embryo doesn’t have the same rights as a baby. The same could be said of human cells cultured in a lab.


On the other hand, gene-edited people like the three CRISPR babies born in China are very much human, even if they have newly introduced genetic mutations. “If you take a genecentred view of humanity, arguably they are outside it,” says Greely.


He worries that such criteria could be used to argue that some individuals aren’t fully human. “Our species has an often-expressed willingness to find and magnify minor differences amongst ourselves into sources for hatred and discrimination,” he says.


Instead, we need to think about what makes humans “morally significant”, says Julian Savulescu at the University of Oxford. “The idea of something being ‘substantially human’ is a step forward because it shows there isn’t a bright line between human and non-human,” he says. “But I think we’ll have to go further than that and start to think about the properties that are especially valuable.”


Such traits are thought to include things like self-consciousness and the ability to form complex relationships, says Savulescu. “How do you evaluate that in a life form that doesn’t speak our language and communicate in the way we do?” he asks.


It is a pressing question. Greely thinks that the first legal cases will surround the treatment of substantially human tissues. If a human organ is grown in a lab from an individual’s cells, how should it be dealt with and disposed of? “There are statutes that require human remains be treated with certain kinds of respect,” he says. For example, in the UK, human tissue must be disposed of in accordance with the donor’s wishes, as far as possible.





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