Litcius/Paper detail

I Am Not the Zygote I Came from because a Different Singleton Could Have Come from It

Chunghyoung Lee

2022The Philosophical Review13 citationsDOI

Abstract

Many people believe that human beings begin to exist with the emergence of the 1-cell zygote at fertilization. I present a novel argument against this belief, one based on recently discovered facts about human embryo development. I first argue that a human zygote is developmentally plastic: A zygote that naturally develops into a singleton (i.e., develops into exactly one infant/adult without twinning) might have naturally developed into a numerically different singleton. From this, I derive the conclusion that a human infant or adult is numerically distinct from the zygote she came from and so did not begin to exist at fertilization. This implies that a zygote does not have a “future like ours” and strongly suggests that it is not a human being.

Topics & Concepts

ZygoteSingletonHuman fertilizationArgument (complex analysis)EmbryoBiologyCell biologyEmbryogenesisGeneticsPregnancyBiochemistryPluripotent Stem Cells ResearchReproductive Biology and FertilityNeuroethics, Human Enhancement, Biomedical Innovations