Yes, there is actually a spark which has been seen when they do the ivf.
You don't seem to understand the issues or the pertinent questions.
An example. Say a childless couple chooses the IVF route. I'm not a doctor and have no direct experience, so I may be wrong on the exact numbers, but I think this is realistic:
1) 20 eggs are harvested from the female
2) The 20 eggs are exposed to sperm and half, by chance, sucessfully get fertilized.
Should the other 10 be considered human deaths, and someone be held accountable for possible subpar lab egg fertilization technique?*
3) The 10 remaining are cultured and allowed to grow. 5 develop and are frozen, 5 do not.
Were these last 5 human deaths, and someone be held accountable for subpar culturing of fertilized eggs??**
4) 3 are later implanted, 2 are saved for a potential future try, should there be no success.
5) One of the three successfully attaches after implantation, 2 do not.
Were these last 2 human deaths?*** Should the doctors or the mother be held accountable for unsucessful implantations?****
6) The couple welcomes a new baby into the world. Their life is fulfilled.
Do they have two babies still in a freezer somewhere? *****
7) If the 2 remaining embryos are never implanted and the freezer fails, the clinic goes out of business, the couple decides they do not desire another child, the couple dies, or the couple breaks up.... maybe those two frozen embryos eventually do not remain viable.
Were they murdered?*******
8)
Do we use your tax dollars to hold onto those embryos for 10 years, 100 years, 1000 years?*******
9)
Should the couple claim 3 dependants on their taxes, one in the home and 2 in a freezer?********
Answers:
*of course not
**of course not
***of course not
****of course not
*****of course not
******of course not
*******of course not
********of course not
But those answers may be different in Alabama, apparently