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The Issue Of Human Cloning - Both Sides Of The Debate

  • Human Cloning
    a different person with a different soul" (Kolata 3). Another ethical issue on human cloning is the fact that, in case this techique advances, "the species will end...
  • Human Cloning
    The Lancet. 351:21 (1998) 506. Shapiro, Harold T. "Ethical and Policy Issues of Human Cloning." The Science News of the Week. 2 Feb. 1997: 195-196. Silver, Lee...
  • Human Cloning: The Negative Effects On Society
    day during an assembly in March 1977, a heated debate began over the topic of human cloning. Both sides were getting very involved in the argument. Suddenly a group...
  • Human Cloning
    or not we as a scientific nation are trying to play the role of God by the diverse issue of human cloning. Early in 1997 Scottish scientist Ian Wilmut revealed to...
  • Human Cloning: The Negative Effects On Society
    day during an assembly in March 1977, a heated debate began over the topic of human cloning. Both sides were getting very involved in the argument. Suddenly a group...

The Issue Of Human Cloning - Both Sides Of The Debate

        The recent news of the successful cloning of an adult sheep-in
which the sheep's DNA was inserted into an unfertilized sheep egg to
produce a lamb with identical DNA-has generated an outpouring of
ethical concerns. These concerns are not about Dolly, the now famous
sheep, nor even about the considerable impact cloning may have on the
animal breeding industry, but rather about the possibility of cloning
humans. For the most part, however, the ethical concerns being raised
are exaggerated and misplaced, because they are based on erroneous
views about what genes are and what they can do. The danger,
therefore, lies not in the power of the technology, but in the
misunderstanding of its significance.

        Producing a clone of a human being would not amount to
creating a "carbon copy"-an automaton of the sort familiar from
science fiction. It would be more like producing a delayed identical
twin. And just as identical twins are two separate
people-biologically, psychologically, morally and legally, though not
genetically-so a clone is a separate person from his or her
non-contemporaneous twin. To think otherwise is to embrace a belief in
genetic determinism-the view that genes determine everything about us,
and that environmental factors or the random events in human
development are utterly insignificant. The overwhelming consensus
among geneticists is that genetic determinism is false.

        As geneticists have come to understand the ways in which genes
operate, they have also become aware of the myriad ways in which the
environment affects their "expression." The genetic contribution to
the simplest physical traits, such as height and hair color, is
significantly mediated by environmental factors. And the genetic
contribution to the traits we value most deeply, from intelligence to
compassion, is conceded by even the most enthusiastic genetic
researchers to be limited and indirect. Indeed, we need...