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cloning organism ethics matches 4 work(s)
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Cover for 9789814667005 Cover for 9789814678537 Cover for 9780393060669 Cover for 9780965377478 Cover for 9780965377485 Cover for 9781893163126 Cover for 9781893163416 Cover for 9781893163690 Cover for 9780742534087
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Hardcover:

9789814667005 | 1 edition (World Scientific Pub Co Inc, December 9, 2015), cover price $68.00

Paperback:

9789814678537 | 1 edition (World Scientific Pub Co Inc, December 9, 2015), cover price $28.00

The definitive book on cloning and the stem-cell controversy by Ian Wilmut, the leader of the team that produced Dolly the sheep

Hardcover:

9780316733205 | Gardners Books, July 6, 2006, cover price $21.40 | About this edition: Provides a discussion of the potential value of cloning and of the ethical choices that this technology has raised, including the issues surrounding stem-cell research.
9780393060669 | 1 edition (W W Norton & Co Inc, June 1, 2006), cover price $24.95 | About this edition: An argument for the benefits of cloning, co-written by a scientist whose team was responsible for a famous cloned sheep, presents the reasons for his opposition to the cloning of humans and explains that cloning technology can be ethically applied to free families from serious hereditary diseases.

Paperback:

9780316724692 | Gardners Books, July 6, 2006, cover price $15.15 | About this edition: The definitive book on cloning and the stem-cell controversy by Ian Wilmut, the leader of the team that produced Dolly the sheep

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In February 1997 Ian Wilmut, a Scottish biologist, announced that he had successfully cloned a sheep, Dolly, from the cells of a Finn Dorset ewe that had been dead for six years. The news that mammalian cloning from adult tissue was possible set off an excited debate among scientists, politicians, ethicists, and the general public about the event's implications and prospects for the cloning of a human being. This book surveys the debate, and for the first time presents Ian Wilmut's own thoughts on the possibility of human cloning. The Human Cloning Debate is edited and introduced by Dr. Glenn McGee of the University of Pennsylvania's Center for Bioethics. In addition to contributions by Wilmut and McGee, there is an authoritative, accessible explanation of the science of cloning by Potter Wickware, editor at the pre-eminent science journal Nature. Other chapters explore cloning's philosophical implications, argue for or against the technology, and present various religious and political perspectives on cloning. The book concludes with a short story by Richard Kadrey that explores creatively how cloning is likely to affect families and human relationships in the (possibly not-too-distant) future. The Human Cloning Debate is a definitive treatment of one of the most intriguing and controversial issues at the close of the millennium. It presents for the first time in print the reflections of the scientist, Ian Wilmut, who brought the subject to the fore. It is essential for readers interested in issues of public policy, in recent developments in biotechnology, and in the intersection of science and philosophy.

Hardcover:

9780965377478 | Berkeley Hills Books, September 1, 1998, cover price $16.95 | About this edition: In February 1997 Ian Wilmut, a Scottish biologist, announced that he had successfully cloned a sheep, Dolly, from the cells of a Finn Dorset ewe that had been dead for six years.

Paperback:

9781893163690, titled "Human Cloning Debate" | 5th edition (Berkeley Hills Books, March 28, 2006), cover price $15.95
9781893163652 | 4th edition (Berkeley Hills Books, July 1, 2004), cover price $15.95
9781893163416 | 3rd edition (Berkeley Hills Books, July 1, 2002), cover price $15.95 | About this edition: Scottish biologist Ian Wilmut’s 1997 cloning of a sheep, Dolly, pushed the possibilities for scientific manipulation of life to new extremes.
9781893163126 | 2nd edition (Berkeley Hills Books, May 1, 2000), cover price $15.95 | About this edition: A collection of essays on the ethics and science of human cloning explores the techniques that make the act a possibility and dissects a future where cloning will no doubt pose serious practical and spiritual questions.
9780965377485 | Berkeley Hills Books, June 1, 1998, cover price $16.95 | About this edition: In the past year, stem cell research has exploded in South Korea and received $3 billion worth of research money in California, proving that the bioethics of cloning will only become more important in the future.

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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.

Hardcover:

9780742534087 | Rowman & Littlefield Pub Inc, November 1, 2004, cover price $27.00 | About this edition: 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.

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