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This 6 page paper delineates some of the many ethical considerations that must be addressed in answering this question. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
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6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PP669377.doc
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number of ethical considerations. The answer to this question is complicated not just by concerns within the scientific community but by economic pressures, aesthetic concerns, religion, and societal interests.
This research, however, holds the secrets to the solutions to some of the most perplexing problems confronting modern medicine. It has the potential to impact the face of
medicine across all cultures and across all geographic boundaries. Stem cell research thus has the potential to benefit humanity as a whole. To realize these benefits, however, this
research must have adequate funding. Our government is a critical source of that funding. Embryonic stem cells are unique because they have the potential of developing into
any type of cell. They have the potential to either remain a generalized cell or to take on specialized function. The applications of stem cell research include improved
treatment in such difficult and debilitating conditions as heart disease, cancer, Parkinsons disease and, in fact, an untold number of other potential applications. Stem cell research has applications in
everything from allowing us the potential to grow new limbs when we lose ours in an accident to aiding our wounds to heal without scarring (Muneoka 56; Pilcher 42).
Unfortunately, embryonic stem cell research is an ethical quagmire. Stem cell research presents a dilemma between utilitarianism and the intrinsic value of life. The utilitarian viewpoint
approaches the issues surrounding stem cell research from the perspective of markets, patents, and progress. On the other side of these issues, however, there are those that see stem
cell research in relation to the intrinsic value of life as a whole verses the reduction of that life into its various components and stages simply for the purpose of
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