EctoLife Concept Video Artificial Womb For Baby Mass Production
Very nice production values make the EctoLife concept video of a baby factory - an artificial womb facility, that is - breathtakingly dystopian.
The concept is the brainchild of Berlin-based Hashem Al-Ghaili, a producer, filmmaker and science communicator and “molecular biologist by trade”.
The facility — which would run on renewable energy — plans to house 75 labs, each equipped with up to 400 growth pods or artificial wombs, reports UK’s Metro newspaper.
These pods are designed to provide the same environment that is present inside a mother’s womb.
Parents can keep a track of their baby’s growth and development through a screen on the pods that showcase real-time data, as per Metro.
This data can also be monitored via an app on the phone.
“The artificial-intelligence based system also monitors the physical features of your baby and reports any potential genetic abnormalities”, Al-Ghaili was quoted as saying by Mirror.co.uk.
During the time of delivery, the baby can be removed from the pod with the “push of a button”.
Fans of Aldous Huxley's 1932 classic Brave New World may recall the artificial wombs used to gestate the citizens of the state.
Even earlier, in A Biological Experiment, a short story by David H. Keller published in Amazing Stories in 1928, a method for producing thousands of human babies is described:
the human ovary could be kept alive and functioning under certain conditions in a glass vessel. Such
an ovary was able to develop and expel a perfect ovum
every twenty-eight days. By a process similar to that
used with the eggs of the sea urchin, these ova could
not only be kept alive but could be developed into fully
matured babies. At a certain point in their growth,
they were taken out of the sterile glucose solution and
respiration started with a pulmometer. As far as any
tests were concerned, they were just like all the other
babies.
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