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Etyka klonowania
Author(s) -
Krzysztof Tittebrun
Publication year - 1988
Publication title -
etyka
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2392-1161
pISSN - 0014-2263
DOI - 10.14394/etyka.327
Subject(s) - cloning (programming) , human cloning , organism , biology , adaptation (eye) , identity (music) , genetics , evolutionary biology , computer science , philosophy , neuroscience , programming language , aesthetics
Cloning is a biological technique of producing any required number of individuals with identical properties as the parent organism from a single cell of the latter. Cloning of protozoa, plants and lower animals meets with no moral objections, but the as yet hypothetical but increasingly more realistic prospect of cloning human beings appears to be highly objectionable. The analysis of the arguments used in the discussion of cloning indicates that mass-scale or repeated replication of human individuals is unacceptable. Such a practice would probably trigger an avalanche of psychological problems connected with the diluted identity of the cloned offspring, a possible social stigmatization of the clones and the negative effects of a narrowing of the genetic pool of the human species which would limit its ability of biological adaptation to the varying conditions of the environment.

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