Is Cloning Ethical? Exploring the Implications with a Friend

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In summary, a friend and I have discussed the implications of cloning and whether it is morally right or wrong. Some argue that cloning is morally wrong because it involves experimenting on people, while others believe it is necessary for scientific advancement. The issue of consent before birth is also brought up, as well as potential implications such as the risk of a clone starting a revolution or war. However, some argue that cloning could have benefits such as providing organ replacements or allowing someone who is handicapped to have a "normal" clone. In the end, it seems that there are more questions than answers when it comes to cloning, and the moral implications of it are still up for debate.
  • #1
DE NERO
A friend and i have been discussing the implications of cloning.
basicially, i would like to know whether you think cloning people is right or wrong morraly, or if we should experiment in the name of science.
 
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  • #2


Originally posted by DE NERO
is cloning morally right or wrong

You got to come more correct than that, young brutha...
 
  • #3
Actually we pretty much know what cloning is all about don't we? Isn't that what identical twins are?
 
  • #4
science, it looks like, can give life to more or less arbitrarily shaped clone, a human like any other, that'll grow and ask for his mother and father.
 
  • #5
..and, would you want to be a clone-experiment in the name of science, without having been asked before..?

(if you clone yourself with your permission, your clone-twin will still be a clone-twin-individual with maybe another opinion on this, who actually was not asked.. he might even post-refuse his permission by hopping the cliffs like a lemming.. he/she might as well be proud to be the first 'independant' ..we just don't know, but i think we needn't necessarily know, do we? should that risk be taken? 't would be 50% chance, half a birth, half a dead-bound, half a man?)

..and besides, ..what would you call herhim?

my beloved-myself-brothersister: Reagenze-3-25-CTTAGCT Jones? :)
or just Jack, Jackie? ..with or without "Jones"?
pfehw..imagine

:)

..what if scientist-clones feeling other than commonly born man, feeling 'independant' of any law would start mass-cloning by themselves start a revolution, a war of the FFL, the "forefatherless"..
you can forget about human evolution, genetic pool, aso., then..

..too many implications, no one can overview..
it's like daring to walk a rotten footbridge to a shore that doesn't in any way look better - you only risk it, when you absolutely got no other way ..not of mere curiosity.. (and, reckoning for all..) not even of meanness, i guess..
 
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  • #6
Hmmmm...consent is an issue I have rarely heard mentioned!
 
  • #7
It just doesn't seem to me that consent before birth is germane to the topic. All of us were conceived, carried to term, and born without our consent. A clone would be in no different situation. I apologize to anyone who got a visual of their parents when her conception was mentioned.
 
  • #8
Cloning people is Amoral.

Experimenting on people is probably immoral, so we shouldn't be experimenting towards cloning technology with people, but in generall we aren't. So there is no issue here.

Once Cloning is of good enough quality, there is no real reason it shouldn't be done.
(there are arguments against it, but there are always arguments against anything)
 
  • #9
cloning a whole human being? or cloning specific organ tissue for organ replacement?

human cloning i feel there is no benefit with the little research done on it, so far in the animals there hasn't been any beneficial proof, why would there be any for humans?
 
  • #10
I agree with Kerrie. I find human to be untenable. People may want to create a clone of a dead loved one. But the cloned person will not be the same. If it's just for clonning organs, then I'd approve. But, would there be any side effects(in the person who receives the organ) if there were to be a discrepency in the growing of a cloned organ?
 
  • #11
cloning happens all the time, just not in a lab.. then again you could argue that the human body is a lab too...
 
  • #12
I do agree that with limited research, cloning could be a disaster, but, eventually, we would be able to clone whole people. What are the benifits? What if someone was born handicapped. couldn't their clone lead a normal life, if their clone was made from a healthy cell.
Also, it would only not be a problem if the scientist had their permission. But LURCH is correct. non of us gave permission to be born, it was our parents, in the case of cloning, the person being cloned.
There is also a problem in operations of organs being rejected. cloned organs would not be rejected, and we would never need to wait for one to become availiable, although cloned organs would take time to produce.
 
  • #13
Any country which can find moral justification for war should not have a problem finding one for cloning, imo.
 
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  • #14
Cloning...doesn't really have any benefits. I find it amazing how much people really don't get cloning. There is very little difference between giving birth to a baby naturally and cloning, other than we have trouble cloning. AS soon as we figure out the technicalities of it, great, yay...we'll be able to make people pregnant.

Morons. We've been able to do that for years.

So what does it mean to give birth to a clone? Well, what's it like to have twins? They look the same, but they each have their own character traits right? Well, think about this. They are two people who have the same DNA, and are brought up in the same environment...and they are still different people. Imagine what a clone will be like of someone who was brought up in completely different environment.
Originally posted by Parsons
I do agree that with limited research, cloning could be a disaster, but, eventually, we would be able to clone whole people. What are the benifits? What if someone was born handicapped. couldn't their clone lead a normal life, if their clone was made from a healthy cell.
Well, if it was a direct clone, no, the clone would have the handicap too.

If you genetically engineered the clone to not have the handicap, then it wouldn't...but at a time when such technology is available, it would make much more sense to just prevent the original person from having the handicap.

But most importantly...whats the benefit here? You aren't fixing the problem faced by the person with the handicap...you are just replacing them. Do you plan on killing the original handicap? Or do you think they will just fade into the background as the new and improved version of them is born?

Anyway, I am yet to hear of a real good applicable for Cloning Human Beings. In fact, with that in mind, I have actually heard of many good reasons not to.

but, even so, I do not think we should 'Ban' such a technology. It is not inherently evil. Its just something which people will quickly realize was a waste of their money. They could have just had sex the old fashioned way and had another kid.
 
  • #15
Originally posted by Another God


Well, if it was a direct clone, no, the clone would have the handicap too.

If you genetically engineered the clone to not have the handicap, then it wouldn't...but at a time when such technology is available, it would make much more sense to just prevent the original person from having the handicap.


Depends on the source of the handicap. Birth defects can occur from a wide range of causes other than genetic. But you're right about not helping the person born handicapped. What good have we actually done them by making a clone of them?

As to a good reason for cloning people, I can think of only a couple. If two people want a child, but one of them carries a gene for some congenital illness, or if the two of them carry recessive genes that pose no threat individually, but combining them would create a risk, then it would be usefull to conceive a child that carries genes from only one parent.
 
  • #16
But again, by the time that Human Cloning is safely available, I am sure it would be much easier, and much more practical to have the parents concieve an egg or however its done (Egg and sperm donation), and have the egg genetically altered at the mutated alelle.

This way you get the two parents in the kid, they both feel the special bond (rather than 'Oh, it YOUR kid' which has a reasonably large chance of occurring to at least some degree) and the problem is non-existent.

So still, I see no advantage to cloning at all. (Please offer more possible advantages. I'd be interested to hear one.)
 

What is cloning?

Cloning is the process of creating an organism that is genetically identical to another organism.

Is cloning ethical?

The ethics of cloning is a complex and controversial topic. Some argue that cloning could have potential benefits for medical research and human health, while others have concerns about the moral implications of creating life in a laboratory setting.

What are the potential implications of cloning?

Cloning can have a variety of implications, including ethical, social, and environmental. It could potentially lead to a lack of genetic diversity and the possibility of creating "designer babies" with specific traits. It also raises questions about the value of human life and the boundaries of science.

What are the arguments for and against cloning?

Arguments for cloning include the potential for medical breakthroughs and advancements in agriculture. Arguments against cloning include concerns about playing God, the potential for abuse and exploitation, and the loss of individuality and uniqueness.

What is the current status of cloning?

Currently, cloning is not widely practiced in humans due to ethical and technical challenges. However, there have been successful cloning experiments in animals, and the topic continues to be a subject of debate and ongoing research.

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