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WILL SEX BECOME OBSOLETE?

BBC Science Focus

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New Year 2024

New technologies could reimagine baby-making as we know it. But will they actually replace tried-and-tested (and enjoyable) methods?

WILL SEX BECOME OBSOLETE?

Over the past decade, I have made some bold predictions about the future of sex. One that's been easy is that people will still be having sex for years to come, but for different reasons: they simply won't do it so much to make babies. That's not to say that making babies will become obsolete, but, rather, that technology will change the ways we do it. There could be a much safer and easier way to reproduce and sex as we know it could end.

Until about a century ago, humans always created embryos and babies in the same old, largely random way - through sex. Then some started using artificial insemination and, 45 years ago, in vitro fertilisation. Important as these technologies have been, they still involve human eggs and sperm. Thanks to stem cell technologies, though, that will shift.

The step change will be in vitro gametogenesis (IVG) - turning skin cells into induced pluripotent stem cells, then turning those into eggs and sperm. IVG is tremendously exciting to millions of couples, but it does raise some tricky questions. For example, if we could make eggs from skin cells, 90-year-olds could become genetic parents. So could nine-year-olds, miscarried foetuses or people who have been dead for years, but whose cells were frozen.

Also consider this: what if we could ma sperm from women's skin cells, or eggs from men's? It could soon be a reality. In 2023, Japanese scientists announced that they had made eggs from a male mouse's skin cells and, using 'normal' mouse sperm, had produced mouse pups.

WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON BBC Science Focus

BBC Science Focus

BBC Science Focus

ARE PSYCHOPATHS REALLY THAT GOOD AT LYING?

Picture infamous psychopaths from fiction, such as the eerily cold and calculating Patrick Bateman in the film adaptation of American Psycho, and they certainly seem like master deceivers. But what about real-life psychopaths? Research confirms that psychopaths are more inclined to lie to get what they want, and that they typically display a striking fearlessness - as if they have ice running through their veins.

time to read

1 min

January 2026

BBC Science Focus

WHY DO WE HAVE TWO OF SOME ORGANS, BUT ONLY ONE OF OTHERS?

The majority of animals on Earth, humans included, are bilaterally symmetrical. It means we can be divided roughly into two mirror-image sides. Evolutionary biologists believe that it has been like that for at least 300 million years, and because life organised this way survived, so did symmetrical design. Hence, two eyes, two ears, two lungs and two kidneys.

time to read

1 min

January 2026

BBC Science Focus

BBC Science Focus

WHY DO CATS PREFER TO SLEEP ON THEIR LEFT?

I've said it before, and I'll keep saying it again and again and again: who knows why cats do anything?

time to read

1 min

January 2026

BBC Science Focus

BBC Science Focus

FORGET COUNTING CALORIES TRY THIS INSTEAD...

Calorie counting isn't just difficult, it's riddled with problems that make it practically useless for anyone trying to lose weight.But there are alternatives

time to read

9 mins

January 2026

BBC Science Focus

BBC Science Focus

SIGNS OF LIFE

The more planets we find outside our Solar System, the better our chances are of finding life on one of them. But if there really is life out there, how do we spot it?

time to read

8 mins

January 2026

BBC Science Focus

WHAT ACTUALLY MAKES SOMEBODY COOL?

Most of us have probably wanted to be cool at some point in our lives, and these efforts can have a big influence on the things we buy, the way we dress, the hobbies we invest in, the people we look up to and even the words we use.

time to read

2 mins

January 2026

BBC Science Focus

BBC Science Focus

It's TIME to WAKE UP and SMELL the roses

What if the pursuit of happiness in the traditional sense – chasing wealth or power – is the very thing stopping you from being happy? Researchers are beginning to understand that spending time enjoying the simple things might be the secret ingredient to enjoying a happy, healthy life

time to read

8 mins

January 2026

BBC Science Focus

BBC Science Focus

THE AARDVARK

In a time when people are being asked to consider eating insects, we should, perhaps, learn a thing or two from the aardvark (Orycteropus afer), Africa’s ant-guzzling gourmand. On an average night, the big-schnozzed mammal devours up to 50,000 of the crunchy critters.

time to read

2 mins

January 2026

BBC Science Focus

BBC Science Focus

ADD WEIGHT TO LOSE WEIGHT

A very basic kind of wearable could make your New-Year-weight-loss plans stick

time to read

3 mins

January 2026

BBC Science Focus

BBC Science Focus

AHEAD OF THEIR TIME

The Maya civilisation is known for its art and architecture.

time to read

8 mins

January 2026

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