Cloning represents a very clear, powerful, and immediate example in which we are in danger of turning procreation into manufacture.
Leon Kass
Biology, meaning the science of all life, is a late notion.
If you have easy self-contentment, you might have a very, very cheap source of happiness.
The benefits of biomedical progress are obvious, clear, and powerful. The hazards are much less well appreciated.
Technological innovation is indeed important to economic growth and the enhancement of human possibilities.
Once you put human life in human hands, you have started on a slippery slope that knows no boundaries.
Many other countries have already banned human cloning, and there are efforts at the UN to make such a ban universal.
Cloning looks like a degrading of parenthood and a perversion of the right relation between parents and children.
There is a lot of hype and fear about this much-talked-about prospect of designer babies.
Almost everybody is enthusiastic about the promise of biotechnology to cure disease and to relieve suffering.
Nobody knew in advance that in vitro fertilization would be, by and large, safe.
I've been opposed to human cloning from the very beginning.
As bad as it might be to destroy a creature made in God's image, it might be very much worse to be creating them after images of one's own.
The human animal has evolved as a preeminently social animal.
In the case of abortion, one pits the life of the fetus against the interests of the pregnant woman.
Perhaps you could sympathize with those who seek to replace a dead child with a copy, or to copy a parent or a relative or even a celebrity.
The technological way of thinking has infected even ethics, which is supposed to be thinking about the good.
We are enmeshed in a lineage that came from somewhere and is going to make way for the next generation.
It's a short step from the belief that every child should be wanted to the belief that a child exists to satisfy our wants.
One could look over the past century and ask oneself, has the increased longevity been good, bad or indifferent?
The abortion controversy is important for what it says about our stance toward procreation and children altogether.
We should never rush into folly just because other nations are practicing it.
If one is seriously interested in preventing reproductive cloning, one must stop the process before it starts.
There's an ancient tension between wanting to savor the world as it is and wanting to improve on the world as given.
I don't like being forced to reduce my thoughts to sound bites.
Genetics is crude, but neuroscience goes directly to work on the brain, and the mind follows.
Many people recognize that technology often comes with unintended and undesirable side effects.
The technical is not just the machinery. The technical is a disposition to life.
My job is to provide the president with the richest possible consideration, so that he knows what is at stake in whatever decision he makes.
I don't believe that efforts to prohibit only so-called reproductive cloning can be successful.
It's very hard to make arguments about the effects of cloning on family relations if family relations are in tatters.
Even if certain rogue countries do things we wish nobody did, it doesn't necessarily mean that their foolishness should justify our following suit.
Is it possible to covet a much longer life for one's self and be as devoted to the well-being of the next generation? It's a long argument.
I have nothing against respecting people who lived before, but we have no responsibility toward them.
The so-called right to reproduce is not an unlimited right.
Limits have to be set on how far one can simply use the... cleverness that we have to make changes.
One should proceed with caution. We may simply not be wise enough to do some of the kinds of engineering things that people are talking about doing.
Sexuality itself means mortality - equally for both man and woman.
It seems to me that a kind of thinking which is not technocratic has an opportunity for a renaissance in this country.
We are somehow natured, not just to reproduce, but for sociality and even for culture.
Our only responsibility is to live our own life and take care of our own children.
In cloning, in contrast, reproduction is asexual - the cloned child is the product not of two but of one.
An enormous amount of direct advertising from pharmaceutical companies are offering a kind of instantaneous solution to problems.
The neuroscience area - which is absolutely in its infancy - is much more important than genetics.
There were certain questions about the foundations of morals that advances in science all threaten to make more complicated.
We know next to nothing of what we're going to know in 20 or 50 years.
We owe our existence to our parents, but we actually didn't have a choice.
What does it mean to be an individual? What does it mean to flourish?
We may simply not be wise enough to do some of the kinds of engineering things that people are talking about doing.