Essay on Cloning

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Cloning: Why we shouldn't be against it

Essay submitted by Marina


You have been told that you are unique. The belief that there is no one else like you in

the whole world made you feel special and proud. This belief may not be true in the

future.


The world was stunned by the news in late February 1997 that a British embryologist

named Ian Wilmut and his research team had successfully cloned a lamb named Dolly

from an adult sheep. Dolly was created by replacing the DNA of one sheep's egg with

the DNA of another sheep's udder. While plants and lower forms of animal life have been

successfully cloned for many years now, before Wilmut's announcement it had been

thought by many to be unlikely that such a procedure could be performed on higher

mammals. The world media was immediately filled with heated discussions about the

ethical implications of cloning.


Some of the most powerful people in the world have felt compelled to act against this

threat. President Clinton swiftly imposed a ban on federal funding for human-cloning

research. Bills are in the works in both houses of Congress to outlaw human cloning

which it taken to be a fundamentally evil thing that must be stopped. But what is

exactly bad about it? From an ethical point of view , it is difficult to see exactly what is

wrong with cloning human beings. The people who are afraid of cloning tend to think

that someone will break into Napoleon's Tomb, steal some DNA and make 2000

emperors. In reality, cloning would be probably used by infertile people who now use

donated sperm, eggs, or embryos. Do the potential harms outweigh the potential

benefits of cloning? From what we know now, they don't. Therefore, we should not

rush to ban a potentially useful method of helping infertile, genetically at-risk, or single

people to become parents.


We can start by asking whether human beings have a right to reproduce. I say " Yes". I

have no moral right to tell other people they shouldn't be able to have children, and I

don't see that Bill Clinton has that right either. If humans have a right to reproduce,

what right does society have to limit the means? Essentially all reproduction is done

these days with medical help- at delivery, and even before. Truly natural human

reproduction would make pregnancy-related death the number.1 killer of adult women.


OF course, some forms of medical help are more invasive than others. With in vitro

fertilization, the sperm and egg are combined in the lab and surgically implanted in the

womb. Less than two decades ago, a similar concern was raised over the ethical issues

involved in " test-tube babies". Today, nearly 30,000 such babies have been born in the

United States alone. Many parents have been made happy. So what low or principle

says that one combination of genetic material in a flask is Ok, but another is not?


Nature clones people all the time, and rather frequently. Approximately 1 in 1000 birth

is of identical twins. However, despite how many or how few individual characteristics

twins have in common, they are different people. They have their own identities, their

own thoughts, and their own rights. They enter different occupations, get different

diseases, have different experiences with marriage, alcohol, community leadership, and

etc. They have different souls as would cloned individuals. Even if somebody did clone

2,000 Napoleons, they would be even more different from their parents than twins are

from each other because the cloned child would be raised in a different historical

period. The argument that cloning robs individuals of their individuality therefore doesn't

hold.


Perhaps the strongest ethical argument against cloning is that it could lead to a new ,

unfamiliar type of family relationship. We have no idea what it would be like to grow up

as the child of a parent who seems to know you from...

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