Human cloning raises ethical concerns about whether it constitutes "biological plagiarism" by creating copies of existing humans without their consent. While cloning may help certain medical research and treat disease, it also threatens human dignity and individuality by potentially treating people as interchangeable objects if they can be endlessly copied without regard to their unique identity. Any potential benefits of human cloning must be weighed carefully against the ethical issues to ensure people are not exploited or dehumanized.
Human cloning raises ethical concerns about whether it constitutes "biological plagiarism" by creating copies of existing humans without their consent. While cloning may help certain medical research and treat disease, it also threatens human dignity and individuality by potentially treating people as interchangeable objects if they can be endlessly copied without regard to their unique identity. Any potential benefits of human cloning must be weighed carefully against the ethical issues to ensure people are not exploited or dehumanized.
Human cloning raises ethical concerns about whether it constitutes "biological plagiarism" by creating copies of existing humans without their consent. While cloning may help certain medical research and treat disease, it also threatens human dignity and individuality by potentially treating people as interchangeable objects if they can be endlessly copied without regard to their unique identity. Any potential benefits of human cloning must be weighed carefully against the ethical issues to ensure people are not exploited or dehumanized.