Get Nine Lives from Cloning
Victor Andrews
University of Phoenix
Get Nine Lives from Cloning
Even though cloning can overpopulate the earth, the earth cannot meet the supply and demand of a growing population at these rates. The fate of cloning will fall onto the hands of society if the government does not make rules and guidelines for doctors and scientists to abide by. Cloning should be used for medical reasons such as reproducing hearts, kidneys, livers, and curing genetic diseases; scientists try to find ways to make humans live longer, and to revive endangered or extinct species.
What is cloning? According to the World Book Encyclopedia, Volume 4, 1981 pg. 529 p.1-6., “Cloning is a group of organisms that are genetically identical. Most clones result from asexual reproduction, a process in which a new organism develops from only one parent.” Most higher animals cannot form clones naturally except when identical twins or other genetically identical multiple births occur. The experimental process for cloning certain animals involves scientists destroying the nucleus of the egg cell of the animal being cloned. The nucleus is removed from an animal of the same species. The donor nucleus is injected into the egg cell. The egg, with its new nucleus, develops into and animal that has the same genetic makeup as the donor.
No one really knows if cloning is the right answer to a few of the world’s problems. The thought of cloning animals and humans is very frightening to most of society, for religious reasons and/or ethical reasons. There are many prejudice individuals in the world, which will not have a good reaction to living mammals and humans that are cloned. How would cloned humans feel about society’s reaction to them? Personally, I feel cloned humans would experience encounters worse than racism. This is an extremely sensitive subject to argue. There is no right or wrong answer to cloning and there are advantages and...