- Joined
- May 1, 2012
- Messages
- 2,646
- Reaction score
- 616
Now, before you guys start to think about the question at hand.. Let me inform you about what cloning really is.
A majority of us probably perceive cloning to occur like they do in sci-fi movies and other variations, where a person is cloned and two minutes later there's a full grown man/woman (who's a clone) standing before the original. That's not how it happens at all.
In reality, cloning happens very differently. The clone went through a very different process. Instead of coming out a full grown human, it goes through the normal procedures any human would go through. Meaning that it'd stay in the mothers womb for 9 months and be born as a baby, not an adult.
Now, the clone does have very minor differences with an original when it comes to genetics. Such as different fingerprints or freckle patterns, the small stuff, but there's one major thing that sets apart a clone and an original. Experiences through life, that sets up how either the clone or original think and go about situations and blah blah, you understand the rest.
So what makes cloning exactly unethical? Note: My information on the specifics could easily be wrong, but hopefully you're understanding the general concept. (Have fun reading all of this >:3)
A majority of us probably perceive cloning to occur like they do in sci-fi movies and other variations, where a person is cloned and two minutes later there's a full grown man/woman (who's a clone) standing before the original. That's not how it happens at all.
In reality, cloning happens very differently. The clone went through a very different process. Instead of coming out a full grown human, it goes through the normal procedures any human would go through. Meaning that it'd stay in the mothers womb for 9 months and be born as a baby, not an adult.
Now, the clone does have very minor differences with an original when it comes to genetics. Such as different fingerprints or freckle patterns, the small stuff, but there's one major thing that sets apart a clone and an original. Experiences through life, that sets up how either the clone or original think and go about situations and blah blah, you understand the rest.
So what makes cloning exactly unethical? Note: My information on the specifics could easily be wrong, but hopefully you're understanding the general concept. (Have fun reading all of this >:3)