Cloning | Copyright
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Cloning / Paul A. Winters, book editor.
p. cm. — (At issue) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 1-56510-753-5 (lib.: alk. paper). — ISBN 1-56510-752-7 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Cloning—Moral and ethical aspects. I. Winters, Paul A., 1965– . II. Series: At issue (San Diego, Calif.) QH442.2.C56 1998 174'.957—dc21 97-28560 CIP
Copyright © 1998 by Greenhaven Press, Inc., PO Box 289009, San Diego, CA 92198-9009
Printed in the U.S.A.
Every effort has been made to trace owners of copyrighted material.
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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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