Well, I was reading this here thread:
Why are gay marriages legal but not polygamist ones?
And here is what I'm thinking. It is pretty clear that gay marriages will be allowed eventually. Now, gay couples will probably want to have children. At first they will adopt them. But then suppose human cloning is allowed, which isn't all that impossible. Now, it is already possible to make a clone of an animal using the DNA from a non-sexual cell. In other words, you can extract it from a blood cell or what not, and fertilize the egg, and it would work.
So, now, the gay couples would probably want to have children "of their own", meaning, those that have parts of the genome of their parents. That would be quite possible if the cloning of humans is allowed. Would work fine and dandy, too: take half the genome of one guy, half the genome of the other, hire a woman to carry the baby (or raise it in a lab), and voila, you have a baby that's really the child of the gay couple: it has their genes.
Now here is the question: suppose the sets of chromosomes taken from both guys contain a Y-chromosome. What will happen then, theoretically speaking? Will the embryo even start developing? Of course, there is no predictinig what the result would be if it does... But will it develop, or will it just stop at a certain stage?
Don't know if there are any biologists visiting 'Poly, but I am curious nonetheless.
Why are gay marriages legal but not polygamist ones?
And here is what I'm thinking. It is pretty clear that gay marriages will be allowed eventually. Now, gay couples will probably want to have children. At first they will adopt them. But then suppose human cloning is allowed, which isn't all that impossible. Now, it is already possible to make a clone of an animal using the DNA from a non-sexual cell. In other words, you can extract it from a blood cell or what not, and fertilize the egg, and it would work.
So, now, the gay couples would probably want to have children "of their own", meaning, those that have parts of the genome of their parents. That would be quite possible if the cloning of humans is allowed. Would work fine and dandy, too: take half the genome of one guy, half the genome of the other, hire a woman to carry the baby (or raise it in a lab), and voila, you have a baby that's really the child of the gay couple: it has their genes.
Now here is the question: suppose the sets of chromosomes taken from both guys contain a Y-chromosome. What will happen then, theoretically speaking? Will the embryo even start developing? Of course, there is no predictinig what the result would be if it does... But will it develop, or will it just stop at a certain stage?
Don't know if there are any biologists visiting 'Poly, but I am curious nonetheless.

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