Article ID: CBB282491667

Embryos, microscopes, and society (2016)

unapi

Embryos have different meanings for different people and in different contexts. Seen under the microscope, the biological embryo starts out as one cell and then becomes a bunch of cells. Gradually these divide and differentiate to make up the embryo, which in humans becomes a fetus at eight weeks, and then eventually a baby. At least, that happens in those cases that carry through normally and successfully. Yet a popular public perception imagines the embryo as already a little person in the very earliest stages of development, as if it were predictably to become an adult. In actuality, cells can combine, pull apart, and recombine in a variety of ways and still produce embryos, whereas most embryos never develop into adults at all. Biological embryos and popular imaginations of embryos diverge. This paper looks at some of the historical reasons for and social implications of that divergence.

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Authors & Contributors
Andrieu, Bernard
Bates, A. W.
Beltrame, Lorenzo
Detlefsen, Karen
Druart, Thérèse-Anne
Floud, Roderick
Journals
Arabic Sciences and Philosophy
Archives Internationales d'Histoire des Sciences
Bulletin of the History of Medicine
Comparative Studies in Society and History
History: Reviews of New Books
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
Publishers
Cambridge University Press
McGill-Queen's University Press
University of California Press
University of Southampton (United Kingdom)
University of Wisconsin at Madison
Springer Nature
Concepts
Development; growth; life; death
Human body
Human embryology
Medicine
Fetus
Reproductive medicine
People
Avicenna
Hooker, Davenport
Ibsen, Henrik Johan
Malebranche, Nicolas de
Warnock, Mary
Zurr, Ionat
Time Periods
19th century
20th century, late
18th century
20th century
20th century, early
21st century
Places
United States
Europe
Spain
Great Britain
Paris (France)
Italy
Institutions
Carnegie Institution of Washington
University of Pittsburgh
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