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The Human Cloning Debate
by Glenn McGee (Editor)
The Human Cloning Debate by Glenn McGee (Editor)
Reviews
Book Description
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.

About the Author
Dr. McGee, editor of The Human Cloning Debate, is Associate Director for Education of the Penn Center for Bioethics, and Assistant Professor in Penn's School of Medicine. He is a 1998 Atlantic Fellow of the Commonwealth Foundation. Dr. McGee has authored The Perfect Baby: A Pragmatic Approach to Genetics (Rowman & Littlefield, 1997), in addition to over fifty articles, 11 reviews, and 7 encyclopedia entries. His comments have appeared in US and international newspapers, and he has discussed cloning, genetics, and bioethics on national news programs such as CNN, Charlie Rose, and PBS' Jim Lehrer News Hour.

Customer Comments

A reader from Memphis, Tennessee, March 1, 1999
Lincoln Douglas Debate
This is a great collection of strong opinions on the new LD topic about genetic engineering. We used it for cards and to get us acquainted with the whole shebang.

A reader from New York, New York USA, October 30, 1998
Excellent and Engaging
We looked at several cloning books for our coffeehouse conversations series. This was the only one with good science as well as provocative ethics material. The article by Art Caplan and the religious material are excellent. This is the only book with an article by cloning scientists in it, and I found Ian Wilmut's perspective on the difference between adoption and cloning to be fascinating.

A reader from Los Angeles, CA, October 11, 1998
Very controversial.
I saw this book reviewed in the New York Times and chose it for teaching my high school seniors about Dolly and human cloning. It is very comprehensive, with the President's commission report and lots of stuff that isn't in the other three anthologies. The science and the introduction are great for students. Wilmut's article is wrong, I think. But it is very controversial and interesting. This seems to be the only thing he has written about the ethics of the Sheep he made. The students like it very much.

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