One of the most discussed topics in the scientific community is human cloning. Human cloning has led many other scientists to differentiate their views on the ethical issues of different cloning. Because cloning may contribute to stem cell research, medical health problems and disease, human cloning should not be banned. The problem is "Is it safe?" Or "cloning is disabled or does not exist". All these questions should be considered by scientists. Since then, plants have studied how plants self-replicate, and scientists began making clones of small animals such as frogs and mice.
Human cloning has been a problem for science fiction for centuries, but the prospects that may actually occur are recent developments. On February 23, 1997, the birth of the first clone sheep Dolly was announced. Since then, scientific progress seems to be faster than moral understanding. Every progress in genetics brings hope and dilemma to us. We promise that treatment and prevention of diseases such as cancer and Parkinson's disease will soon be available. The dilemma is
Human Cloning During the past few decades cloning was a hypothetical idea deeply related to SF and movies. One idea that one day cloning will become reality is thought by many experts that it is scientifically impossible. But on February 22, 1997, what was considered pure science fiction became a reality. That day, the team of the Roslin Institute headed by Dr. Ian Wilmut changed history by revealing what looks like a normal sheep. That name occurred in the 1950s when James Watson and Francis Crick discovered the structure of DNA (D'Souza NA). Since then, there was discussion about the cloning of humans and animals. It seems impossible to get out of hand, basically impossible, but everything changed when the sheep named Dolly became the first cloned mammal in 1997. She was cloned for treatment of the disease and study of the organ of the transplanted animal of man (Schaeffer 3). Now the scientist knows
Creating a human clone is a matter of time. Animals are cloned and the race of the first clone is progressing smoothly regardless of whether it is legal or not. What happens when the first person is cloned? Many questions surrounding this topic have been raised, and with the advent of human cloning, the answer is not that far. Twenty years ago, the only topic on human reproduction was science fiction movies, but in 1994 sheep called Dolly was duplicated and started to wait without knowing the first copy. What happens when the message of the first clone arrives in general?