Compilation of free information about human parts, their function, assembly, repair, and maintenance
How to make a human body? As in any manual on assembling anything, let's start with listing the parts. You can, in principle, assemble any material object, including a human body, by putting neutrons, protons, and electrons in a proper order. Taking a hierarchical approach, you should first make atoms of different chemical elements. Then you assemble atoms into molecules. This will allow you to form different parts of cells, the main building blocks of any live system on this planet. Cells of the same type can be then combined into tissues. The collection of appropriate tissues make organs, the major functional parts of a human machine. A combination of organs that perform major processes or functions, e.g. digestion, respiration, make organ systems. Finally, to complete the job you need to interconnect the organ systems to make a complete, kicking and breathing human being.

I have to confess right away that I am not an expert on this subject. However, I am very curious and I hope that writing these notes will help me to learn as I make them. So please feel free to ignore this scribbling and move on to more authoritative sources below. Otherwise, you are welcome to observe my learning process on the pages under the title "how to make humans" as they s-l-o-w-l-y emerge.
The most obvious content under the title "How to make humans" should be dedicated to dating and other types of human behavior that lead to sexual reproduction. This website, however, does not provide this information. Instead, it is about what parts humans are made of and how these parts work together. It is also about the methods of making and repairing these parts and assembling them into working structures, ...perhaps, some day into a complete human. This subject sounds like science fiction. In fact, many science fiction novels and movies covered the topic for entertaining purposes and for testing ethical issues associated with it. The science and technology progressing so fast that many "science fiction" things have become reality already.