High ideals on that site, but atrocious layout and weird points. Its apparently written in 1999 as well, so the last 15 years of ethics and bioscience advancements have passed it by.
Regarding the website, I really doubt Cloning will replace sexual procreation. Somehow, i doubt humanity will give that up.....
Im also interested in their description of some terms, such as the labelling of the failed attempts that took place in the leadup to dolly as all failed lambs, instead of failure to mitose as a zygote, failure to implant, and miscarriages, all of which are already a part of natural life, not just in vitro. yes, nature has a lower failure rate, but it has hundreds of millions of years of practise at getting a working system, compared to our puny humans 30 or so years.
I cant speak on the commodification of humans and a reduction of diversity, but i suspect current laws and ethics already prevents these, making them moot points.
the point about permanent gene pool changes and a reduction in diveristy is interesting, but somehow, i suspect, not relevant for at least 25 years at a bare minimum, due to the fact that for there to be spreading of modified DNA, the modified person must first reproduce.. to change laws, create an embryo, implant it, wait out the pregnancy, then grow the child through puberty to adulthood will take a long time. as for gene pool diversity reduction, that would require that there be no mutations in the egg as compared to the egg that become the donor human, that there are no environmental factors acting on a cell as it grows into an embryo, and that scientists arent actually trying to put in variations to keep the gene pool diverse, to prevent this problem.
The threat of eugenics is probably at least partly justified, but probably even further away then genes entering the gene pool, so I think we dont need to worry about it. Several of my lecturers work on genomics and evolution, and they think this is the better part of 40 years away, due to the fact that while sequencing the genome was a hard and long task, figuring out what every part of it does, and how they all interact is magnitudes harder.
On a final interesting note, apparently the author isnt a biologist, but a lawyer.
For a better opposing point of view, i prefer the American Association for the advancement of sciences point of view that we really shouldnt try reproductive cloning on humans for a while, as we still have many problems to sort out first. they released it in november last year as well.
http://www.aaas.org/page/american-association-advancement-science-statement-human-cloning cthia wrote:You know. I never realized that cloning had such an importance already. My niece sent me this website...