This is critical foundational research that could lead to advances in reproductive medicine, cancer biology and treatment, tissue engineering, and a host of other applications. However, the...
This is critical foundational research that could lead to advances in reproductive medicine, cancer biology and treatment, tissue engineering, and a host of other applications. However, the general guideline on a fourteen-day limit for human embryos developed in vitro, not technically achievable previously, is generating novel ethical questions (let alone religious ones).
This is a fascinating read, thanks for posting it. I do not appreciate changing the title of the article however; it is perfectly adequate and descriptive as published by Nature. Your intro...
This is a fascinating read, thanks for posting it. I do not appreciate changing the title of the article however; it is perfectly adequate and descriptive as published by Nature. Your intro comment to accompany the article as a highlight enough to generate interest and discussion, just my 0.2cents.
This is critical foundational research that could lead to advances in reproductive medicine, cancer biology and treatment, tissue engineering, and a host of other applications. However, the general guideline on a fourteen-day limit for human embryos developed in vitro, not technically achievable previously, is generating novel ethical questions (let alone religious ones).
This is a fascinating read, thanks for posting it. I do not appreciate changing the title of the article however; it is perfectly adequate and descriptive as published by Nature. Your intro comment to accompany the article as a highlight enough to generate interest and discussion, just my 0.2cents.
My apologies if it seemed click-baity or distorting - I'm new here and still feeling out the cultural norms for posting. Thank you for the correction.