Whose View of Life?: Embryos, Cloning, and Stem Cells

Voorkant
Harvard University Press, 22 dec 2003 - 342 pagina's

Saving lives versus taking lives: These are the stark terms in which the public regards human embryo research--a battleground of extremes, a war between science and ethics. Such a simplistic dichotomy, encouraged by vociferous opponents of abortion and proponents of medical research, is precisely what Jane Maienschein seeks to counter with this book. Whose View of Life? brings the current debates into sharper focus by examining developments in stem cell research, cloning, and embryology in historical and philosophical context and by exploring legal, social, and ethical issues at the heart of what has become a political controversy.

Drawing on her experience as a researcher, teacher, and congressional fellow, Jane Maienschein provides historical and contemporary analysis to aid understanding of the scientific and social forces that got us where we are today. For example, she explains the long-established traditions behind conflicting views of how life begins--at conception or gradually, in the course of development. She prepares us to engage a major question of our day: How are we, as a 21st-century democratic society, to navigate a course that is at the same time respectful of the range of competing views of life, built on the strongest possible basis of scientific knowledge, and still able to respond to the momentous opportunities and challenges presented to us by modern biology? Maienschein's multidisciplinary perspective will provide a starting point for further attempts to answer this question.

 

Inhoudsopgave

From the Beginning
13
Interpreting Embryos Understanding Life
49
Genetics Embryology and Cloning Frogs
88
Recombinant DMA IVF and Abortion Politics
125
From Genetics to Genomania
169
Facts and Fantasies of Cloning
212
Hopes and Hypes for Stem Cells
249
Conclusion
298
Notes
307
Index
329
Copyright

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Pagina xvi - Act may be used for — (1) the creation of a human embryo or embryos for research purposes; or (2) research in which a human embryo or embryos are destroyed, discarded, or knowingly subjected to risk of injury or death greater than that allowed for research on fetuses in utero under 45 CFR 46.208(a)(2) and ... 42 USC 289g(b). (b) For purposes of this section, the term 'human embryo or embryos...

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