Front cover image for Cloning after Dolly : who's still afraid of human cloning

Cloning after Dolly : who's still afraid of human cloning

A medical ethicist offers a sober but ultimately encouraging assessment of the future of cloning, arguing ultimately that cloning will change the landscape of medicine and society in beneficial ways.
Print Book, English, c2004
Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham, c2004
210 pages
9780742534087, 0742534081
1005495118
The political theater of cloning
How cloning will surprise us
Our clones, our selves: what cloning tells us about ourselves
Cloning prized livestock and clonal food
Cloning endangered species and pets
Psst! Rael wants to sell you a bridge in Brooklyn
Does cloning harm the souls of cloned children?
Deciphering cloning at the earliest stages of life
Why the world should not ban cloning
Why cloning will not hurt genetic diversity
Actors, feminists, Marxists & cloning
Safe, reproductive cloning: intrinsically good
Risking my baby
Should cloned kids be outlaws?
Cloning and religion: real enemies
Humanzees & transgenic species
World on fire: ethnic biological dynasties
Cloning and sports
Cloning, twins, & nature/nurture
Ethics of novel human originations
Cloning the great
The encroaching darkness