IntelligencesMembers only Jun 29, 20264Add to bookmarks

Researchers have just created embryoids capable of developing neural tubes, organ precursors, and even a primitive cardiac chamber that contracts autonomously. Marie-Thérèse Bonnet analyzes this crossing of boundaries in the name of Thomistic realism.
We had been following the trajectory of this thread: misoprostol prescribed alone, the National Academy of Medicine opposing paid gametes, the symbolic confrontation between the legacy of Jérôme Lejeune and the utilitarian logics of contemporary reproductive biology. The news published by Généthique on June 29 represents a qualitative leap: embryoids now develop a primitive cardiac chamber that contracts autonomously.
According to the published data, teams of researchers have succeeded in developing embryoids—synthetic structures built from stem cells, without the fertilization of an oocyte—with neural tubes, organ precursors, and a functional primitive cardiac chamber. These structures are not human embryos in the classical sense, but they increasingly mimic early development with growing fidelity. The boundary between "model" and "organism" becomes thinner each day.
The question raised by this research is precisely the one that Donum Vitae (1987) and Dignitas Personae (2008) formulated with clarity: respect for the human person begins at the very start of biological life, regardless of the mode of conception. The Magisterium has not yet ruled on embryoids as such, but the applicable principles are clear: any entity whose biological status approaches that of the human embryo must be treated with the respect due to the dignity of the person (Dignitas Personae, n. 5). That a cardiac chamber beats autonomously is not a technical detail: it is an anthropological question of the first order.
The Church is the only global institution with a coherent anthropological framework to respond to these advances. Thomistic realism—the human being as a unity of body and soul, not as a sum of biological functions—provides the necessary intellectual resources. But this assumes that Christians engage in scientific debate with competence, rather than settling for reactive positions. Ethics committees, Catholic medical faculties, and Catholic biologists each have a specific responsibility here.
The term "embryoids" is precisely designed to evade the question of moral status. We name things differently to treat them differently—a classic rhetorical device already denounced by C.S. Lewis in The Abolition of Man. The question is not "Is this an embryo in the legal sense?" but "Is this an entity whose destruction requires serious moral justification?" The Thomistic answer is: yes, as soon as it mimics the development of a human person.
"You formed me in my mother’s womb" (Ps 139:13). Life does not wait for bioethical debate to exist. Catholic scientists, physicians, and philosophers are called to clearly name what is at stake—not out of confessional reflex, but out of a demand for truth. Supporting associations that do this work—Généthique, Alliance VITA—is both an intellectual and a spiritual act.
- **Embryoids** now develop functional primitive cardiac chambers.
- The **boundary between model and organism** is increasingly blurred.
- The **Church’s anthropological framework** remains the most coherent response.
- The term **'embryoid'** is a rhetorical tool to avoid moral questions.
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Et si on parlait des sols qui meurent, des forêts rasées et des enfants qui crèvent de faim avant de s’extasier sur des cœurs en boîte ? La science avance, mais l’humanité recule.
C’est vrai que voir un cœur battre en labo, même artificiel, ça fait quelque chose. On dirait qu’on joue aux apprentis sorciers sans toujours mesurer les conséquences.
Des cellules qui battent toutes seules, ça fait bizarre... On dirait un cœur, mais sans âme. Où est-ce qu'on met la limite entre la vie et un simple assemblage de labo ?
Des cellules qui battent toutes seules, c'est impressionnant... mais un cœur sans âme, ça reste un bout de viande qui pompe.
Misoprostol seul et Jérôme Lejeune : deux visions de l'homme face à face