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The Reality Of Human Cloning In Frankenstein By Mary Shelley

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The Reality of Human Cloning
What if your best friend was to say he or she wanted to clone themself, what would you do? Would you let them do it? Would you stop them because it’s dangerous? Would you stop them because it is unethical? What if it were your grandmother who was 60 years old and just found out she has Parkinson's disease and the only thing that could possible save her is cloning her cells to produce tissue or organs that could save her life? In Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, Victor was able to procure a monster by using dead human body parts to clone a human. Human cloning is the process of removing the nucleus from an egg and replacing it with the nucleus from a somatic cell which completes 46 chromosomes. The egg is then stimulated and if it is successful, it will begin dividing as a new organism. Cloning is wrong except when it is being used to save a person’s life because it is dangerous to clone an entire human and cloning takes away from a parent-child bond. …show more content…

The idea of cloning human came from cloning Dolly who is a sheep. Human cloning became a new possibility after the successful cloning of Dolly the Sheep. Cloning humans is extremely threatening for women’s health and can impact her future fertility. If a failure were to happen we would be looking at abortion, miscarriages and birth of malformed. Also there is no possibility that the clone would have the same exact personality and values as the original human. Additionally there is no guarantee that the clone wouldn’t cause harm or become violent once it realizes that it is a clone and not an original. However there is one good reason for

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