Harvey Newstrom wrote:
>
> I am concerned about these early attempts to clone humans. We do not have
> the technique perfected in animals yet. Dr. Zavos is going to use the same
> technique that produced Dolly. The inventor of that technique says it
> produced hundreds(?) of deformed failures before he got one to work. Dr.
> Zavos does not have any improvement on this technique and does not seem to
> have any way to prevent this large number of failures. I am not sure what
> the advantage of human trials for cloning would be before the technique is
> perfected in animals. Until the safety margin is improved, I'm not sure
> this is viable yet.
How does this compare with natural conception? Doesn't a fair proportion
of naturally conceived fetuses simply never lodge in the uterus or
miscarry rather early in the pregnancy?
This is one more example, though, of the precautionary principle being
applied. You can't get the safety margin down without experimenting, so
saying you can't experiment until you get the safety margin down is
simply imposing a ban by illogic.
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Fri Oct 12 2001 - 14:40:05 MDT