So long as the rights of all human beings involved are respected, including that of any full clones, I have no problems with any of the major applications of cloning technology. In the end cloning yourself is not really much different than having a child, and has the same implications and responsibilities. Now, even within those guidelines the ability can be badly abused, but the same can/could be said of just about anything.
Well, at least once we get our technique perfected well enough that we are not dumping dozens or hundreds of fetuses for every batch of viable clones... I'm a little callous by some's standards, but that is a bit much.
Hoplon said:
Vivi22 said:
Daystar Clarion said:
Cloning people? Ehhhh, that I'm not so sure about, there's all kinds of ethical quandaries with that one.
I'm curious what the ethical quandaries are. I've honestly never heard a good argument against it.
So you clone a person, say for organ harvesting or healthy bone marrow, but surely that person has full rights like anyone else? so how can you take that stuff with out their consent? there is no utility to cloning entire humans.
Also yes for meat, organs, even wood.
direct utility? No
Viable reasons other than en masse organ harvesting? hell yes.
Take Professor Hawking for instance. He is responsible for a very large portion of our current understanding of the universe, particularly in the field of quantum mechanics, and he's done it while suffering from a disease that only allows for the smallest of hand movements for communication. Society desperately needs more minds like his, so why not just get a few more of him? Make five or six clones, correcting for the disease in question along the way, and make sure the kids get a responsible upbringing and the best education. There is always some variance to be expected, but if even one of them ends up making a similar impact the exercise will have been more than worth it