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         Cloning:     more books (100)
  1. Human Cloning (Biomedical Ethics Reviews)
  2. Human Cloning: Playing God or Scientific Progress? by Lane P. Lester, James C. Hefley, 1998-07
  3. Rapture: A Raucous Tour Of Cloning, Transhumanism, And And The New Era Of Immortality by Brian Alexander, 2004-10-06
  4. Cloning: For and Against
  5. Animal Cloning: The Science of Nuclear Transfer (New Biology) by Joseph, Ph.D. Panno, 2004-10
  6. Human Dignity And Human Cloning
  7. Cloning The Messenger by Billie Borchardt, 2000-10-12
  8. The ABCs of Gene Cloning by Dominic Wong, 2005-12-09
  9. Cloning (Genetics: the Science of Life) by Susan Schafer, 2009-03
  10. Body Doubles: Cloning Plants and Animals (Science at the Edge) by Sally Morgan, 2003-04
  11. Cloning and Genetic Engineering (Life in the Future) by Holly Cefrey, 2002-09
  12. Clone Medusa by R. C. Lulay, 2007-08-22
  13. Gone: A Sci Fi about cloning by Virginia Salazar, 2003-02-28
  14. Cloning Tomato Plants for Fun and Massive Profits

61. Cloning And Catholic Ethics
Explains the Catholic Church s opposition to cloning and stem-cell research on human embryos, with resources from a Catholic ethicist, Pope John Paul II and others.
http://www.americancatholic.org/News/Cloning/default.asp
Cloning and Catholic Ethics The Catholic Church opposes all forms of cloning and stem-cell research. Read opinions by Pope John Paul II, an American bishop and a Catholic ethicist. Q U I C K L I N K S
Backgrounder: U.S. House Votes to Ban Cloning
The Ethics of Cloning: A Catholic Ethicist Looks at the Issues

Is Stem-Cell Research Moral?

Vatican Statement on Cloned Human Embryo

Bishop Gregory Statement on Cloned Human Embryo

On Feb. 27, 2003, the U.S. House of Representatives voted for the second time to ban all human cloning.
The act prohibits people from knowingly attempting to perform human cloning or participating in such a procedure by shipping or receiving an embryo produced from human cloning, whether the cloned embryo is to be used for reproduction or research. A bill to allow cloning for research but ban it for reproduction failed the same day in a 231-174 vote.
The U.S. bishops' pro-life spokeswoman praised the 241-155 vote to pass the Human Cloning Prohibition Act.

62. Cloning: Facts, Discussion Forum, And Encyclopedia Article
Biology is a natural science concerned with the study of life and living organisms, including their structure, function, growth, origin, evolution, distribution, and taxonomy .
http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/topics/Cloning
Home Discussion Topics Dictionary ... Login Cloning
Cloning
Discussion Ask a question about ' Cloning Start a new discussion about ' Cloning Answer questions from other users Full Discussion Forum Encyclopedia Cloning in biology Biology Biology is a natural science concerned with the study of life and living organisms, including their structure, function, growth, origin, evolution, distribution, and taxonomy....
is the process of similar producing populations of genetically identical individuals that occurs in nature when organisms such as bacteria Bacteria The bacteria are a large group of unicellular, prokaryote microorganisms. Typically a few micrometres in length, bacteria have a wide range of shapes, ranging from spheres to rods and spirals...
insect
Insect Insects are a class within the arthropods that have a chitinous exoskeleton, a three-part body , three pairs of jointed legs, compound eyes, and two antennae...
s or plant Plant Plants are living organisms belonging to the kingdom Plantae. They include familiar organisms such as trees, herbs, bushes, grasses, vines, ferns, mosses, and green algae. The scientific study of plants, known as botany, has identified about 350,000 extant species of plants, defined as seed plants,...
s reproduce asexually Asexual reproduction Asexual reproduction is reproduction which does not involve meiosis, ploidy reduction, or fertilization. Only one parent is involved in asexual reproduction. A more stringent definition is agamogenesis which refers to reproduction without the fusion of gametes...

63. Wolfgang Schirmacher - Cloning Humans With Media: Impermanence And Imperceptible
Article by Prof. Dr. Schirmacher analyzes the postmodern condition and decision of the world to clone humans with media and describes our fundamental activity as Homo generator.
http://www.egs.edu/faculty/wolfgang-schirmacher/articles/cloning-humans-with-med
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      Cloning Humans with Media: Impermanence and Imperceptible Perfection
      Wolfgang Schirmacher.
      Toronto, 2000
      1. The Post-modern Condition: Cloning-in-the-world For McLuhan and his followers, hardware is the real news! But since the death of Lady Di, McLuhan has had to eat his own words: the global village showed itself as an ethical world beyond the petty distinction between hardware and software. The Soul was revealed for a long day of mourning, and billions of people celebrated a cloning-of-the-world that media was able to achieve. 2. The Post-modern Decision: Cloning Humans The post-modern decision as judgment does not identify or conceptualize the acts of cloning since it continues to favor difference and to resist integration and truth. The lessons we learned from Levinas, Lyotard, Derrida or Bataille are still valid. Interruption, hesitation, postponement, violence: as post-modern preparations for a different way of acting, these have not yet lost their touch. The folding, unfolding and refolding — as Deleuze described our Being-for-the-world — will not recapture identity or Being or time as means to make our lifeworld more accessible and an easier place. Therefore, Mother Di does not function as an icon and is not a lifestyle commercial which allows instant identification. Instead, Mother Di follows the complexities of truth which Heidegger determined as "aletheia," a timeless interplay of revealing and concealing.

64. Cloning
Invitrogen cloning Tools. kits and reagents to simplify cloning procedures; Reliable, reproducible performance at every stage of your cloning experiment
http://www.invitrogen.com/site/us/en/home/Products-and-Services/Applications/Clo

65. Human Cloning And Eugenics Must Be Researched To The Fullest Extent Possible.
A public forum on the need for human cloning and a worldwide program of eugenics helping the human race improve. With a report on the science and their position on these issues.
http://www.truthtree.com/clone.shtml
Two Part Invention by Bach
Performed by Remi
Human Cloning
Humans are on the threshold of taking control of their own evolution!
This page was last modified on Monday, 01-Nov-2010 11:02:21 MDT.
The First Successful Clone of a Sheep

Who's Afraid of Human Cloning?

A Brief Overview of Genetic Engineering

Stem Cell Research
The First Successful Clone of a Sheep
Dolly, the first viable clone of a sheep, was created in the following manner. A developing egg cell from the ovary of a sheep was enucleated (had its nucleus removed) and fused with a somatic mammary cell from another adult sheep. This fusion was accomplished by placing the two cells close to each other and passing an electric current through them. The resulting cell, actually a zygote, was then treated in a way similar to that used with in vitro fertilization. ( In vitro The successful cloning of a sheep aroused much interest because of the obvious implication that humans might also be cloned in a similar fashion. Many different animals have been cloned now including mice and monkeys, and it appears quite certain that humans can be cloned. Indeed, human clones may already have been produced. Any such cloning procedure would probably not be advertised because of the strident objections that have been raised against the procedure.
Who's Afraid of Human Cloning?

66. Cloning | Globalchange.com | Cloning, Human, Article, Read
cloning of Mouse Frozen for 16 years Futurist Mice have been successfully cloned from another mouse which died 16 years ago, whose intact body was frozen at minus 20
http://www.globalchange.com/Cloning/
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Cloning of Mouse - Frozen for 16 years
Futurist Topics - Cloning Rate This Article Mice have been successfully cloned from another mouse which died 16 years ago, whose intact body was frozen at minus 20 degrees centigrade (1st November 2008). The Japanese research raises questions about whether extinct animals could be cloned from bodies preserved in permafrost, or indeed if a dead person could be "recovered", cloned as a time-warp identical baby twin made from tissue frozen at or before death. Cloning presents huge practical and ethical issues - with major risks to the health of cloned animals (or humans).    Read more: Cloning of Mouse - Frozen for 16 years
The Future of Human Cloning - ethics - progress - politics - VIDEOS
Futurist Topics - Cloning Rate This Article

67. Cloning
Douglas Dunn examines ethical considerations. Written by an identical twin (one of nature s clones ).
http://www.wordwiz72.com/cloning.html
Cloning
by Douglas Dunn Douglas Dunn Word Wizards The amazing reports of successfully-cloned adult mammals have been followed by a dialogue that is frightening in its fearful and outrageous tone. Once again we hear a chorus of gnashing teeth bewailing the onset of a "Brave New World" and fears of test-tube manufactured babies and a world populated by robotic armies of genetic sameness. But these cries of fear are not really against cloning at all, but merely against the newness of innovation. In their hearts, human beings know that it is not so terrible to have a genetic double. I am an identical twin, now in my late forties. My brother, Dennis, and I look alike. Many aspects of physical appearance, emotions, mannerisms and behavior are strikingly similar. Even now, when we are out together, people often come up and ask with fascination if we are twins. They also frequently remark how wonderful it must be to have a twin. We are also unique individuals with differing opinions, beliefs and lifestyles. Clones would be no more similar than identical twins. On the contrary, they would be more different

68. Cloning Essays And Articles At ENotes
cloning essays, articles, and viewpoints In February 1997, Ian Wilmut and his colleagues at the Roslin Institute in Scotland announced the stunning news that they had
http://www.enotes.com/cloning-article

69. Medical Ethics Understanding Cloning
Interactive site that creates a journal of your own private ethical issues, including human cloning.
http://www.learner.org/cgi-bin/delivery/exhibits/medicalethics/cloning/index.htm

70. Cloning: Hopes And Fears Of Human Cloning And Stem Cells
Proponent essay by Jo o Pedro de Magalh es highlighting the implications of the technologies.
http://jp.senescence.info/thoughts/cloning.html

Home
Thoughts
Cloning
Cloning, including reproductive and therapeutic cloning, is an emerging technology. In this essay, I focus on the implications of this new polemic technology and how it can influence our lives. As a scientist , who works with stem cells in mice, I have an obligation to contribute to educating the public concerning these technologies and the ethical problems they entail.
From Clones to Dolly
Clones are genetically identical organisms. In other words, organisms with the same DNA or genome. Organisms with asexual reproduction, like many microorganisms, usually have millions of clones because only rare mutations are a cause of genetic change. In mammals such as humans, the existence of clones is limited to divisions of the egg, often called identical or monozygotical twins. Having the same genome does not imply that two animals will be exactly the same. Even identical twins are different to some degree. During development there are always random events, called developmental noise, that are unique to each organism. In addition, changes in education, nurturing, and other environmental factors can lead to noticeable differences between adult organisms with the same genome. In 1997, Ian Wilmut and colleagues at the

71. Cloning - Wookieepedia, The Star Wars Wiki
cloning was the process of creating a genetically identical or purposefully and specifically modified copy of an original organism.
http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki/Cloning
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72. TIME.COM
Multimedia site from Time Magazine highlights the announcement of Dolly, with the look at the procedure, ethics, and future of cloning technology.
http://www.pathfinder.com/TIME/cloning/
Moved Permanently
Moved Permanently

73. 00.03.07: Human Cloning, Genetic Engineering And Privacy
Contents of Curriculum Unit 00.03.07 Narrative; Rationale ; Objectives; cloning. Lesson 1 Handout 1 Been There; Done That Lesson 1 Handout 2 Things That Make Your Brain
http://www.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/2000/3/00.03.07.x.html

74. WashingtonPost.com:
Jessica Matthews looks at the realities of cloning after the dust has settled after the Dolly announcement. Washington Post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/science/cloning/edit.htm
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Post-Clone Consciousness
By Jessica Mathews
Monday, March 3 1997; Page A19
The Washington Post Thinking about the post-Dolly world, let it first be clear that there will never be a human clone in the sense that that word is generally understood, namely as an exact replica of another individual. As applied to humans, a clone is a literary conceit, not a scientific possibility. A cloned sheep proves that it will probably soon be possible to make a genetically identical copy of a person, but that is not remotely the same thing as making another you or another me. This is so because a human's genetic inheritance is not, as the usual metaphor portrays it, a precise and fixed blueprint. It is, rather, a set of changeable potentialities that act on an individual's environment and are acted upon by it. Much more than any other species, we are the result of nature (genes) and nurture (environment) not merely the sum of the two but the product of a constant interplay between them. A physical or emotional characteristic of our environment interacts with a particular genetic endowment to elicit a particular behavior that in turn puts the individual into a particular environment and so on and on in an endlessly complex pattern that makes a person unique.

75. Cloning Extinct Animals
cloning Perhaps one of the most controversial issues of the new century is that of cloning. While scientists have been able to successfully clone animals, it remains to
http://www.extinctanimal.com/cloning.htm
Home Prehistoric Gallery Cloning ... Resources
Cloning
Perhaps one of the most controversial issues of the new century is that of cloning. While scientists have been able to successfully clone animals, it remains to be seen how the genetic lineage of the subjects ill be altered. Already, we have heard reports that "Dolly", the cloned sheep, is weaker than the original, and has suffered through a series of illnesses, including arthritis. The issue of human cloning has also generated public outcry, with both left and right wing groups agreeing on a ban.
One of the most popular arguments is the possibility that in the wrong hands, cloning technology could be used to replicate malevolent individuals such as Adolph Hitler. Hollywood fantasy, or possible reality? The blockbuster hit Jurassic Park, based on the Michael Crichton novel of the same name, introduced the theory that by using genetic material from extinct animals combined with that of amphibians (the only species of vertebrates able to regenerate lost limbs), scientists would be able to bring dinosaurs back to life.
While Dino DNA could only have been extracted from blood inside mosquitoes that were preserved in amber to suit the story, it is in fact possible for us to get material from recently extinct animals to try and bring a species back. That is where science fiction ends and science fact begins.

76. AAAS - Center For Science, Technology And Congress
A summary of the human cloning issue, and a collection of links to useful web resources, including information from the media, and groups on all sides of the debate.
http://www.aaas.org/spp/cstc/briefs/cloning/
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AAAS Policy Brief: Human Cloning
AAAS Resources Links The issue of human cloning has been the subject of much public debate since the birth of the cloned sheep Dolly was announced in 1997. The profound ethical questions surrounding the prospect of the birth of a human clone have received much scrutiny. In recent months, the debate has included the topic of human embryonic stem cell research , which scientists believe could benefit from experimentation using the procedure pioneered by the scientists who produced Dolly. Nuclear Transplantation
The Link to Stem Cell Research

Legislative Debate

Arguments Against Nuclear Transplantation Research
...
The International Perspective
Nuclear Transplantation
This procedure is known as nuclear transplantation, or somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT). It involves removing the nucleus, which contains a cell's DNA, from an egg cell and transplanting the DNA from an adult cell into the enucleated egg. Under certain conditions, the egg then begins to replicate as though it were a fertilized embryo.

77. Cloning Research Guide | Find Articles At BNET
Find articles on cloning. Research this technology and the ethical debate over its use in our featured publications.
http://findarticles.com/topic/cloning/
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    Cloning
    Scientists cloned "Dolly the sheep" in 1997, creating a media storm about the possibility of human cloningand its ethical implications. However, one should understand the there are distinct types of cloning before taking an ethical or political stance. There are three types of cloning technologies that can be used for purposes besides producing genetic copies of organisms: recombinant DNA technology or DNA cloning, reproductive cloning, and therapeutic cloning. We feature articles from publications and scientific journals that discuss the ramifications of cloning.
    Most Recent Articles on Cloning

78. Home Page
Broad range of basic data including scientists, methods, stem cells, research, and abnormalities.
http://robby.nstemp.com
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WEB SITE ABOUT CLONING Home Page What is cloning Scientists in cloning Development of fetus ... Photoalbum
what is cloning ?
In 1997 scientists in Scotland, led by Dr. Ian Wilmut of the Roslin Institute, cloned the first mammal, a sheep named Dolly. Since then mice, goats,mules,rats,monkeys ,cows and pigs have been successfully cloned around the world. This has made human cloning a real possibility.
Cloning is different from natural fertilization which is "sexual" reproduction that occurs when a sperm fertilizes an egg. In normal fertilization the developing embryo (and person) has the genetic makeup or DNA of both parents 23 chromosomes from the female and 23 from the male. The embryo is the unique human organism with a novel genetic makeup having the full potential to develop to adulthood.
Human cloning, on the other hand, is a type of "asexual" reproduction, which means reproduction not initiated by the union of egg and sperm. Cloning is accomplished by a technique called "somatic cell nuclear transfer." One takes the nucleus from a body (somatic) cell and transfers it into a female egg which has had its nuclear material removed. Then with an electric current or chemical stimulus the cloned embryo begins to divide as does a fertilized embryo.

79. Human Cloning Foundation Home Page
Promoting education, awareness, and research with emphasis on the possible rewards.
http://www.humancloning.org/
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Fertile vs. Infertile
The number 1 website in support of human cloning technology, stem cell research, and infertility treatments. An offical 501(c)3 non-profit foundation. TERMS OF SERVICE: By reading this website you agree not to sue anyone involved with this website for anything. See your own experts. Our terms of service and content may change at any time.
Take a Look at our NEW FORUM
as of Sept. 2009 Read our NEW BLOG (Sept. 2009) for interesting Cloning Articles
Contact Us by Email
The Benefits of Human Cloning Sam Smith lists 16 key benefits of human cloning - from reversing heart attacks to providing a solution to infertility - and says he is only scratching the surface. 22 Reasons for Human Cloning Twenty-two key reasons to support human cloning, including the practical (for future financial security), the vain (to cure baldness) and the truly awe-inspiring (to cure infertility, fix deformity and prolong life). The Top 10 Myths About Cloning No, cloning does not "Xerox" a person. And no, cloning won't produce soul-less babies who aren't loved by their parents. Gregory Pence tackles the top 10 myths that people have about cloning.

80. The Twin Paradox - Reason Magazine
Ronald Bailey asks what exactly is wrong with cloning people. Reason Magazine
http://www.reason.com/9705/col.bailey.html

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