"Let People Decide Their own Fate: Free Market Bioethics" Discusses the benefits of allowing people (not government) to make their own decisions regarding cloning and bioengineering.

Title: "Let People Decide Their own Fate: Free Market Bioethics" Discusses the benefits of allowing people (not government) to make their own decisions regarding cloning and bioengineering.
Category: /Social Sciences/Controversial Issues
Details: Words: 825 | Pages: 3 (approximately 235 words/page)
"Let People Decide Their own Fate: Free Market Bioethics" Discusses the benefits of allowing people (not government) to make their own decisions regarding cloning and bioengineering.
The issue of biotechnology is one of the most fiercely debated of all current issues. Bioethics is complex because both sides have such strong arguments. On one hand biotechnology is the Holy Grail for millions of people, offering cures for illnesses and disabilities thought to be incurable. On the other side of the argument, a society of lifeless clones and three eyed babies are seen as possible side effects of fooling with Mother Nature. Both …showed first 75 words of 825 total…
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…showed last 75 words of 825 total…life if that is what he or she desires. Works Cited J. Howard Beales. Review of Business and Government. 8 Oct. 2001. The Cato Institute. 9 Dec. 2001 <http://www.cato.org/pubs/regulation/reg20n1r2.html> Miller, Henry. "Agricultural Biotechnology." The Wall Street Journal 16 Dec. 1998: 34. Postrel, Virginia. "Fatalist Attraction: The Dubious Case Against Fooling Mother Nature." Writing and Reading Across the Curriculum. Eds'. Laurence Bethrens and Leonard J. Rosen. New York: Addison Wesley Longman. 2000. 556-560.

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