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  1. Evolution of the Clonal Man: Inventing Science Unfiction.Peter N. Poon - 2000 - Journal of Medical Humanities 21 (3):159-173.
    From carrots to frogs to sheep and finally to humans, the history of cloning is a fascinating study of the interplay between science and popular culture. Imagination and discovery provide mutual impetus in the evolving science and cultural phenomenon of cloning. Its history is a paradigm of science unfiction: What once belonged unequivocally on the pages of science fiction is now emerging in flesh and blood. Writers, movie producers, ethicists, and all manner of social commentators, no less than scientists, have (...)
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  • Human cloning: Three mistakes and an alternative.Françoise Baylis - 2002 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 27 (3):319 – 337.
    The current debate on the ethics of cloning humans is both uninspired and uninspiring. In large measure this is because of mistakes that permeate the discourse, including the mistake of thinking that cloning technology is strictly a reproductive technology when it is used to create whole beings. As a result, the challenge this technology represents regarding our understanding of ourselves and the species to which we belong typically is inappropriately downplayed or exaggerated. This has meant that important (albeit disquieting) societal (...)
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  • The human genome project.Lisa Gannett - 2009 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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