Cloning

Related Essays

  • Cloning Cloning Cloning is the process of creating a genetic duplicate of an individual. Since the February 1997 announcement of the birth of Dolly, a sheep cloned by Ian...
  • Youve Been Cloned Been Cloned One day, in the near future you could suddenly notice that your appearance is the same as three other people. I am sure that you would be extremely su...
  • Stem Cell Research Introduction The desecration of life by use of embryonic stem cells is not necessary with alternatives such as adult, placenta, and umbilical stem cells available...
  • Cloning Cloning is the process of creating an identical copy of something. This means that every single bit of DNA is the same between the two. In biology, it collectivel...
  • Cloning Argument Andre Szyszkowski Psy 130 04/28/05 Cloning: Choice is Ethical Thousands of people a year are placed on the organ donor's list. Thousands of people a year are diag...

Cloning

Cloning is the process of creating a genetic duplicate of an individual. Since the February 1997 announcement of the birth of Dolly, a sheep cloned by Ian Wilmut, cloning research has increased considerably. Cloning humans has recently become much more of a possibility in society than it was years ago. Scientists are on the edge of a huge breakthrough in the field of human cloning, and society must ask itself whether or not it should be allowed. Many arguments can be made for and against human cloning, but since it is unethical and would take away individuality and disrupt social values, the practice of cloning humans is one that government should ban and society should not accept.

Proponents of human cloning may argue that it is just a logical and inevitable advance in science research and technology. It is, however, too risky for human subjects. At the present time, the general consensus of the public is against human cloning.

(Fitzgerald 37) Within a few years' time, however, the medical possibilities of human cloning may be attractive enough to change public opinion. Research on human cloning would involve huge risks for the initial clones, because any experiments in human cloning would eventually have to be carried out on human beings. Human cloning is unethical because the risks of this practice greatly outweigh the benefits. The technique that produced Dolly the sheep was successful in only 1 of 277 attempts. If this technique were attempted in humans, it would risk miscarriages in the mother and severe developmental problems in the child. Standard medical practice would never allow the use of any drug or device with such little study and without much additional animal research. (National Bioethics Advisory Commission) The actual risks of physical harm to the cloned child cannot be certain without conducting experiments on human beings. This in itself is unethical because no one knows what will happen and the child...

View Full Essay

  • Submitted by: cnelson
  • Date Submitted: 05/24/2008 04:30 PM
  • Category: Science
  • Words: 765
  • Pages: 4
  • Views: 451
  • Popularity Rank: 2916

View Full Essay