РефератыИностранный языкEuEuthenasia Essay Research Paper The Issue of

Euthenasia Essay Research Paper The Issue of

Euthenasia Essay, Research Paper


The Issue of Human Cloning


The recent news of the successful cloning of an adult sheep-in


which the sheep’s DNA was inserted into an unfertilized sheep egg to


produce a lamb with identical DNA-has generated an outpouring of


ethical concerns. These concerns are not about Dolly, the now famous


sheep, nor even about the considerable impact cloning may have on the


animal breeding industry, but rather about the possibility of cloning


humans. For the most part, however, the ethical concerns being raised


are exaggerated and misplaced, because they are based on erroneous


views about what genes are and what they can do. The danger,


therefore, lies not in the power of the technology, but in the


misunderstanding of its significance.


Producing a clone of a human being would not amount to


creating a “carbon copy”-an automaton of the sort familiar from


science fiction. It would be more like producing a delayed identical


twin. And just as identical twins are two separate


people-biologically, psychologically, morally and legally, though not


genetically-so a clone is a separate person from his or her


non-contemporaneous twin. To think otherwise is to embrace a belief in


genetic determinism-the view that genes determine everything about us,


and that environmental factors or the random events in human


development are utterly insignificant. The overwhelming consensus


among geneticists is that genetic determinism is false.


As geneticists have come to understand the ways in which genes


operate, they have also become aware of the myriad ways in which the


environment affects their “expression.” The genetic contribution to


the simplest physical traits, such as height and hair color, is


significantly mediated by environmental factors. And the genetic


contribution to the traits we value most deeply, from intelligence to


compassion, is conceded by even the most enthusiastic genetic


researchers to be limited and indirect. Indeed, we need only appeal to


our ordinary experience with identical twins-that they are different


people despite their similarities-to appreciate that genetic


determinism is false.


Furthermore, because of the extra steps involved, cloning will


probably always be riskier-that is, less likely to result in a live


birth-than in vitro fertilization (IVF) and embryo transfer. (It took


more than 275 attempts before the researchers were able to obtain a


successful sheep clone. While cloning methods may improve, we should


note that even standard IVF techniques typically have a success rate


of less than 20 percent.) So why would anyone go to the trouble of


cloning?


There are, of course, a few reasons people might go to the


trouble, and so it’s worth pondering what they think they might


accomplish, and what sort of ethical quandaries they might engender.


Consider the hypothetical example of the couple who wants to replace a


child who has died. The couple doesn’t seek to have another child the


ordinary way because they feel that cloning would enable them to


reproduce, as it were, the lost child. But the unavoidable truth is


that they would be producing an entirely different person, a delayed


identical twin of that child. Once they understood that, it is


unlikely they would persist.


But suppose they were to persist? Of course we can’t deny that


possibility. But a couple so persistent in refusing to acknowledge the


genetic facts is not likely to be daunted by ethical considerations or


legal restrictions either. If our fear is that there could be many


couples with that sort of psychology, then we have a great deal more


than cloning to worry about.


Another disturbing possibility is the person who wants a clone


in order to have acceptable “spare parts” in case he or she needs an


organ transplant later in life. But regardless of the reason that


someone has a clone produced, the result would nevertheless be a human


being with all the rights and protections that accompany that status.


It truly would be a disaster if the results of human cloning were seen


as less than fully human. But there is certain

ly no moral


justification for and little social danger of that happening; after


all, we do not accord lesser status to children who have been created


through IVF or embryo transfer.


There are other possibilities we could spin out. Suppose a


couple wants a “designer child”-a clone of Cindy Crawford or Elizabeth


Taylor-because they want a daughter who will grow up to be as


attractive as those women. Indeed, suppose someone wants a clone,


never mind of whom, simply to enjoy the notoriety of having one. We


cannot rule out such cases as impossible. Some people produce children


for all sorts of frivolous or contemptible reasons. But we must


remember that cloning is not as easy as going to a video store or as


engaging as the traditional way of making babies. Given the physical


and emotional burdens that cloning would involve, it is likely that


such cases would be exceedingly rare.


But if that is so, why object to a ban on human cloning? What


is wrong with placing a legal barrier in the path of those with


desires perverse enough or delusions recalcitrant enough to seek


cloning despite its limited potential and formidable costs? For one


thing, these are just the people that a legal ban would be least


likely to deter. But more important, a legal barrier might well make


cloning appear more promising than it is to a much larger group of


people.


If there were significant interest in applying this technology


to human beings, it would indicate a failure to educate people that


genetic determinism is profoundly mistaken. Under those circumstances


as well, however, a ban on human cloning would not only be ineffective


but also most likely counterproductive. Ineffective because, as others


have pointed out, the technology does not seem to require


sophisticated and highly visible laboratory facilities; cloning could


easily go underground. Counterproductive because a ban might encourage


people to believe that there is a scientific basis for some of the


popular fears associated with human cloning-that there is something to


genetic determinism after all.


There is a consensus among both geneticists and those writing


on ethical, legal and social aspects of genetic research, that genetic


determinism is not only false, but pernicious; it invokes memories of


pseudo-scientific racist and eugenic programs premised on the belief


that what we value in people is entirely dependent on their genetic


endowment or the color of their skin. Though most members of our


society now eschew racial determinism, our culture still assumes that


genes contain a person’s destiny. It would be unfortunate if, by


treating cloning as a terribly dangerous technology, we encouraged


this cultural myth, even as we intrude on the broad freedom our


society grants people regarding reproduction.


We should remember that most of us believe people should be


allowed to decide with whom to reproduce, when to reproduce and how


many children they should have. We do not criticize a woman who takes


a fertility drug so that she can influence when she has children-or


even how many. Why, then, would we object if a woman decides to give


birth to a child who is, in effect, a non-contemporaneous identical


twin of someone else?


By arguing against a ban, I am not claiming that there are no


serious ethical concerns to the manipulation of human genes. Indeed


there are. For example, if it turned out that certain desirable traits


regarding intellectual abilities or character could be realized


through the manipulation of human genes, which of these enhancements,


if any, should be available? But such questions are about genetic


engineering, which is a different issue than cloning. Cloning is a


crude method of trait selection: It simply takes a pre-existing,


unengineered genetic combination of traits and replicates it.


I do not wish to dismiss the ethical concerns people have


raised regarding the broad range of assisted reproductive


technologies. But we should acknowledge that those concerns will not


be resolved by any determination we make regarding the specific


acceptability of cloning.

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