an inevitable future, the sooner we embrace this concept the better. In fact, lab grown humans may be the only humane way to reverse the population decline which seems to track with economic development
People don't need to consume resources the wasteful way they do today. People don't need to live like Americans with SUVs and giant McMansions with wasteful yards.
If you want innovation and a human society that's advancing rather than stagnating, you need a large population, not one that's rapidly shrinking. You're not going to get a society where everyone is super-smart and highly productive, at least without genetic engineering making humans into something they currently aren't. It takes a lot of people to get innovation, because only a tiny fraction of the population creates any innovation (and many innovations come from people who only create that one notable thing).
The way things are going, eventually there just won't be any humans, only automation serving an extinct society.
I mean... cool but that's not addressing the problem at all (which is that having kids is too costly and risky right now, we have negligible infertility issues instead) because to pay for this you probably would have to pay far more than needed to allow current fertile population to have kids "the standard way", which needs: social support, controlled house prices and paternal/maternal pay leave.
In this case instead you would have to pay not only for the whole "babies farm" (which sounds extremely costly) but then also to grow and educate every single kid at least for 18-22 years without real parents/community.
It sounds like making the solution even worse than the problem.
Yea I think the problem is not the inability to produce babies, but rather the high cost required to raise them in stable households (education, healthcare, opportunities).
Even with additional costs it'll still be beneficial in form of lowered birth trauma and death. Also, mother will be able to work for the whole period and pay for it.
Talk about dystopian. This is some Brave New World stuff. Can we look at the separation of human biology/human nature and ask ourselves what happens when we cut out the reason of human existence for the history of humanity, or even the drive of every living organism to procreate?
There are things that happen to women when they grow and give birth to children. What happens when we remove that? And will governments "fix" the human depopulation crisis the by growing children in vats and having the state raise them?
It's not even a solution for the problem. Making the baby is super easy, being pregnant is relatively easy compared to raising the kid, having the kid is pretty difficult for a day or two then you've got a few weeks of recovery.
The hard part comes in the following 5-10 years.
40-50 years if you are in the unlucky 1-5% and have a child with a severe developmental issue.
The chances are low, lower if it's legal to do an abortion on a fetus with the associated markers, but they're still there. Parents may never not have a child to care for, one who can not reciprocate in their later years.
I don't see how it is anything other than inevitable. Religions, governments, other organizations/entities have a lot of reasons and not all will be prevented from doing so.
The essential problem of modification isn't who is tailoring people, but that anyone at all is tailoring people. It legitimizes the notion that human beings can be made subject to the wills and desires of others in the manner of an instrument. It's the same moral stance that enabled chattel slavery, but worse. Much worse.
The idea is just reheated science fiction, but the underlying hubris, and resulting moral blindness, is even older.
We already have government institutions for educating kids, called "schools". We just need to expand these institutions' roles so they including all the parts of housing and raising children until they're adults. It could done far more efficiently than by relying on unpaid volunteers, and paid for with much higher taxes (people won't need money for big houses and raising kids any more when the State takes over this role).
Honestly, I don't see how this solution could possibly be worse than the only viable alternative, which is to simply accept a sharply shrinking population and sit around and wring our hands about how no one wants to have kids any more.
This is a pastiche, right? Because the buzzwords ... they're frightening. Which sane person's first thought when considering an artificial baby factory is "Is there an app"?
Scientists have developed artificial wombs, although they are fairly limited right now. They supported a premature lamb fetus from the late 2nd trimester for four weeks in an artificial womb until it could be kept alive by traditional neonatal care. The lambs did not have the lung or brain damage characteristic of extremely premature births.
By concept, they mean concept art. There is no technical information to back this up. The technology to do such things as using a" delicate layer of engineered enzymes, [to] recycle waste products" is pretty far away.
But is that actually invented, i.e. does it work? It reminds me of the Korea segment of "Cloud Atlas", but that's sci-fi. My understanding is that "artificial womb" is nowhere near a solved problem, scientifically.
There's an awful lot here about renewable energy, AI, screens and phone apps but virtually nothing about how this could possibly work from a biological or even practical perspective.
It's more of "here's a cool sci fi concept and some vfx to go with it". Strange to me how it's being pitched almost like it's a funded startup or something.
In case anyone is wondering whether this is a real project: this is literally just science fiction. It's a design concept imagining a potential future, with zero intention to productize.
The guy was an unwitting visionary of a truly utopian future. He didn't even like the world he created, even though in every metric it's a far more desirable world to live in than our own.
Not impressed, sounds like a rehashed vc idea. If they really want to solve a problem, look at the declining fertility rates in the world. Growth in the womb is the last phase of a very tough yourney.
No need to have such vast farms if there is nothing to grow.
This concept was explored in the movie Man of Steel, where Krypton had outlawed live births but I forget the reason why. They called it the Genesis Chamber.
That movie was such a huge disappointment. It had a lot of potential, and some great FX and some great acting talent, but the movie overall was really quite terrible.
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[ 2.4 ms ] story [ 121 ms ] threadThe way things are going, eventually there just won't be any humans, only automation serving an extinct society.
In this case instead you would have to pay not only for the whole "babies farm" (which sounds extremely costly) but then also to grow and educate every single kid at least for 18-22 years without real parents/community.
It sounds like making the solution even worse than the problem.
But it seems that nature has some division of responsibilities cut out for us.
There are things that happen to women when they grow and give birth to children. What happens when we remove that? And will governments "fix" the human depopulation crisis the by growing children in vats and having the state raise them?
The chances are low, lower if it's legal to do an abortion on a fetus with the associated markers, but they're still there. Parents may never not have a child to care for, one who can not reciprocate in their later years.
But then government gets to bend babies any way they like. I hope baby farms will never come to existence.
The idea is just reheated science fiction, but the underlying hubris, and resulting moral blindness, is even older.
From what I know "untailored" people do not develop into anything meaningful on their own.
Honestly, I don't see how this solution could possibly be worse than the only viable alternative, which is to simply accept a sharply shrinking population and sit around and wring our hands about how no one wants to have kids any more.
https://www.theverge.com/2017/4/25/15421734/artificial-womb-... https://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms15112
"Cloning humans" is going to be clickbait for a long time yet.
No need to have such vast farms if there is nothing to grow.
Worldbuilding Reddit thread: https://www.reddit.com/r/worldbuilding/comments/zgursc/ectol...
Original blog post (This is a satire site) https://scienceandstuff.com/ectolife-artificial-wombs/
https://youtu.be/yhwV6ekluWU?t=96