Cloning | Cloning Can Be an Ethical Form of Human Reproduction
Alun M. Anderson is editor of New Scientist, a weekly science magazine published in London.
Summary: Though it is easy to imagine bizarre uses of cloning technology that resemble science fiction scenarios, it is also not difficult to think of beneficial uses for the new procedure. Cloning could assist infertile couples or those suffering from genetic diseases to have healthy children. Human cloning research should not be banned.
Dolly is surely the most remarkable animal ever born. She can’t trace her parentage back to a ewe...
[The entire page is 1177 words long]
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- Introduction
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Table of Contents
- Human Cloning Would Be Unethical
- Human Cloning Would Violate Christian Ethics
- Cloning Would Violate Human Dignity
- Human Cloning Would Violate the Dignity of Children
- Human Cloning Should Be Banned
- Animal Cloning Experiments Will Be Beneficial to Humans
- Animal Cloning May Be Acceptable Even If Human Cloning Is Unethical
- Cloning Can Be an Ethical Form of Human Reproduction
- Cloning Should Not Be Banned Out of Fear
- Human Cloning Has Not Been Proven Harmful
- Ethical Concerns About Cloning Are Misplaced
- Human Cloning Is Inevitable
- Human Cloning Experiments Should Be Allowed
- Organizations to Contact
- Bibliography
- Copyright
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