davywavy: (Default)
[personal profile] davywavy
Just been thinking about cloning, and the objections to it. Thoughts, really, not much more...

Religious objections to cloning seem to me to be fairly pointless; we aren’t playing God, as theology claims that the thing God cares about is the soul, not the body, and as we aren’t recreating souls, then nothing has been done against any Holy law.
Nobody is claiming that cloned kids are any more than identical duplicates; as are identical twins, and nobody frets about whether they have souls. Basically, if God wants them to have a soul, then they will, and if he doesn't then there's not much we can do about it.
The human moral objections are more of a grey area, but still less pressing. There’s evidence that clones suffer degenerative disorders for no readily explained reason, and so deliberately creating a child that’s likely susceptible to such things is probably morally wrong – certainly it’s higher on the ‘wrong’ list than deliberately aborting a normally conceived child that is susceptible. In addition, cloned kids, especially at this stage, are likely to grow up completely fucked in the head. Growing up knowing that you’re completely different – and also all the other kids at school will be merciless (kids are like that) to someone different – will lead to cloned kids growing up into yet more emotional Michael Jacksons. It’s morally wrong for parents to deliberately inflict that on their kids as well.

On a social basis, I can’t see a problem. Cloning is expensive and unreliable at best, and as such it will remain the preserve of religious whackos, gullible rich folks who have been convinced that it will bring back little Billy who was hit by a tram in an identical format, and radical feminists who can’t handle the thought of a man being involved in the reproductive process at all. Hardly a large demographic sample, and I don’t see the good old fashioned way of making kids being outdated anytime soon.

Thoughts on breast, etc. implantation surgery

Date: 2003-01-09 08:49 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] applez.livejournal.com
Considering the pioneering of the technique in the mid-1970s, the medical technology was hugely popular just 10 years later, then with wide social acceptance a further 10 years on (even to the point that it is now offered to female soldiers in the US armed forces gratis), and now just short of another 10 years it is a pretty conventional technology competing with other body modification services.

Serious problems with the technology have been discovered over this period, but that hasn't been enough to really make much of a dent in its popularity (though one can argue the demand has plateued).

At a guess, I'd say a maximum of 15-20% of the US female population has used this technology at some point in their lives. Rising to the 50th percentile for image-concious societies as in Los Angeles.

And yes, we'll ignore the 'trannies' for now. :-)

This, at least, is the case for the US.

This kind of adoption pattern for a new medical technology can apply to cloning I think ... so long as it becomes affordable and reliable enough

Profile

davywavy: (Default)
davywavy

March 2023

S M T W T F S
   1234
56789 1011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Feb. 26th, 2026 01:00 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios