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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 8 page paper provides an overview of a research study on the debates of human cloning. This paper provides a view on the side of opposition to human cloning and reviews both sides of the issue. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MH11_MHClonDeba.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
have been raised since Dolly the sheep was first cloned in 1996. The author relates the way in which the progression of technology over the past decade has led
to a variety of views of the ethics of cloning directly linked to the context of each development. Both United States and international entities have had to define human
cloning, relate an ethical directive, and create policies that respond to public fears, religious beliefs and the call for improvements in health science (de S. Cameron, 2006). In conjunction
with the technological developments, the author maintains that the development of bioethics panels have occurred out of the emerging view that cloning debates would be increasingly problematic. The
cloning debate, de S. Cameron (2006) maintains is directly linked to public imagination and the capacity to project the future of biotechnology, which incites fear because of the potential public
ramifications. This author relates the many different debates on the floor of the United States Congress regarding clonal embryo research and the legalization of elements of cloning research. The
author even relates the statutes introduced in 2004 in New Jersey regarding the use of clonal fetuses in research, but stipulations that clonal fetus cannot be brought to term.
In other words, the author relates legislation that allows for human cloning to take place in a research realm, as long as no cloned baby is born and survives.
This author goes on to relate international efforts, including those developed in the European Union, which are in alignment with the 2001 Bush decision to allow for federal funding of
cell lines that have already been cultivated, but not to continue federal funding for new cloning research. This research article maintains that because of the value placed
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