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Buy God and the Embryo by Brent Waters, Ronald Cole-Turner available and for sale on Brightsurf
| View Larger Image | God and the Embryo by Brent Waters, Ronald Cole-Turner
| | List Price: | $26.95 |  | | Available: | Usually ships in 24 hours |  | |  | | Sales Rank: | 723121 | | Studio: | Georgetown University Press |  | | Binding: | Paperback | | Number Of Pages: | 240 | | Publication Date: | September 05, 2000 | | Publisher: | Georgetown University Press |
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EDITORIAL REVIEWS | Book Description Discussions and debates over the medical use of stem cells and cloning have always had a religious component. But there are many different religious voices. This anthology on how religious perspectives can inform the difficult issues of stem cell research and human cloning is essential to the discussion. Contributors reflect the spectrum of Christian responses, from liberal Protestant to evangelical to Roman Catholic. The noted moral philosopher, Laurie Zoloth, offers a Jewish approach to cloning, and Sondra Wheeler contributes her perspective on both Jewish and Christian understandings of embryonic stem cell research. In addition to the discussions found here, GOD AND THE EMBRYO includes a series of official statements on stem cell research and cloning from religious bodies, including the Roman Catholic Church, the Orthodox Church in America, the United Methodist Church, the Southern Baptist Convention, the United Church of Christ, the Presbyterian Church (USA), and the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America and the Rabbinical Council of America. "Human Cloning and Human Dignity: An Ethical Inquiry," from the statement of the President's Council on Bioethics, concludes the book. The debates and the discussions will continue, but for anyone interested in the nuances of and religious perspectives that make their important contributions to these ethically challenging and important dialectics, GOD AND THE EMBRYO is an invaluable resource. |
CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 4.5 based on 3 reviews)
| Very complete  The book is a series of articles from religious scholars about the subjects of cloning and stem cell research. It is not a book about attacking these subjects, which was a treat for me. Some of the scholars are long winded, and I avoided those articles. If you are doing a research paper on this subject this is a perfect book to have to learn the various religious points of view of the major faiths. December 09, 2005 | | Medley of perspectives  This book had its genesis in a 2001 seminar called "The Ethics of Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research, " but includes follow-up essays dealing with later developments. It tries to catch a fast moving ball on the hop. The pivotal point in this book is the moral status of the embryo up to 14 days by which time the individuality of the embryo has become clear beyond all doubt. Up to that point identical twins or triplets can spring from one embryo, and two embryos can merge to develop into one. Different conclusions emerge depending on whether one places the emphasis on potential or on individuality. On the one hand, the early embryo is potentially a fully developed human being, whether identical twinning takes place afterwards or not. Must we not, therefore, refuse the option of using an embryo as a disposable object of manipulation, no matter how good the intention? On the other hand, if the embryo is capable of becoming two embryos, individuality has not yet appeared. Can one then argue from personhood? If not, is it wrong to generate embryos in vitro and to destroy them at this early stage with the intention of developing new cures?
A new dimension adding intensity to the debate is the recent discovery of the possibility of therapeutic cloning which is a combination of the processes of cloning and stem-cell technology: a cell from the body of the patient is transformed into the (moral?) equivalent of a fertilized egg; this egg divides to the point where stem cells can be harvested; these can be transformed into specialized cells potentially suitable for repairing organs. Therapeutic cloning necessarily means the creation and subsequent destruction of embryos. The question of their moral status is critical to any ethical consideration.
All of the contributors to this book would agree with the Pontifical Academy of Life statement of August 2000: the living embryo from the moment of the union of the gametes ... cannot be considered as `a simple mass of cells.' All agree that this special conjunction of cells is worthy of respect, but to what degree? Most would not accept as absolute the Academy's argument from identity and individuality: that before 14 days the embryo is `a human subject with a well defined identity, which from that point [of conception] begins its own coordinated, continuous and gradual development ... From this it follows that as a "human individual" it has the right to its own life.'
One paper argues that the context of the genesis of the embryo (in utero or in vitro), including the intention, affects the status society gives the embryo. For another contributor, to create and destroy an embryo for the purpose of establishing a new stem-cell line is morally wrong, but, using the principle of `nothing is lost,' the use of excess embryos as a by-product of in vitro fertilization could be justified. Considering the status of the early embryo as uncertain, another contributor balances possible malfeasance against the `beneficence,' of possible cures, and chooses for the latter, given that God's desire is for healing and health. Another position favours the safer approach with a chapter entitled: "To be willing to kill what for all one knows is a person is to be willing to kill a person." A broader justice perspective suggests embryonic stem-cell research should be limited to non-human embryos, and that we should concentrate on the development of cures for other diseases that affect a greater number of people around the world.
Some lacunae in this book might deprive the reader of a broader, and therefore more accurate, picture. The route of adult stem cells research, though mentioned in passing, is not sufficiently explored as a way of bypassing the moral dilemmas associated with embryonic stem-cell research. Given such an available route, plus the availability of non-human embryonic experimentation, the moral arguments for therapeutic cloning given in the book might be less convincing. Also not treated adequately, though mentioned in passing, are the inevitable major problems associated with introducing specialized cells derived from stem cells into the organs of patients; this process will involve experimentation on children and adults and is fraught with major ethical problems. Missing also is a moral consideration of the economic motive for therapeutic cloning with its accompanying ethically dubious public relations strategies. Finally, the symbolic/cultural aspects could be further developed, though Cole-Turner's insightful opening chapter, "Religion meets Research" does allude to culture; even the thought of the possibility of cloning changes our shared perception of what it is to be human with consequences for how we relate to each other.
This book does not fail in its intention, namely to inform the reader of a wide range of opinions, and to offer an imaginative reflection on the role of religious tradition in this debate. Church leaders, conscientious scientists, and public policy makers would do well to read this book if they wish to move from the present political stalemate that has mostly resulted by default in an unregulated free for all in such an important field.
Conall O'Cuinn SJ
Manresa Jesuit Centre of Spirituality
July 29, 2005 | | Ethics In the Face of Uncertainties  This book is a well done collection of essays on the controversial subject of stem cells and cloning from various religious perspectives.
While all were fascinating to read, several caught my attention.
Especially Fitzgerald's, the main subject of his essay being the title chosen for this review. He makes the salient point that there are pervading issues of uncertainty on this controversial issue of stem cell research, especially in the two areas that some would make it seem it's a slam dunk: scientific and medical. What is not told enough to the general public about this issue is that there are equally if not more promising technologies out there to benefit disease and suffering than stem cell. Further, he shows how some of the previous track record of science in promising huge societal returns if society will only let science take the ethical risks have not only not fulfilled their beneficial promises, but have brought about tragic and troubling ethical/medical results. He further intimates that the results of some already stem cell research has brought more opening of "ethical can of worms" than it has solved. These need to be thought out, and he argues convincingly that science needs to provide more justification for such contentious reserach before gaining go ahead approval. Just playing the old "religion vs. science" card doesn't fit here, nor should it be played.
Many other essayists bring out what is not really being discussed enough: source of stem cells. In vitro has allowed a supposed research population, with too much assumption about "eggs ready for research". Possibly this is area that society has a whole has been too uninformed and needs to reconsider. The supposed right to have a child at any cost mentality and ethic that has spurned such an industry and frozen embryo population has brought about this bioethic dillemma,now seeping into stem cell and cloning. James Peterson gives an insightful essay into this source issue.
The highly fluid discussion of any moral status the embryo might have is engaged uniquely by Brent Waters. He suggests we turn to a most useful concept is our judging of this" our neighbor.
Since this issue is in the news and the 2004 Presidential election, citizens interested in various religious views will be served well with this work. It includes some major religious confessional bodies' statement as well as the President's Council of Bioethics statement as well appendixed.
October 10, 2004 | |
SIMILAR PRODUCTS |
| | The Human Embryonic Stem Cell Debate: Science, Ethics, and Public Policy (Basic Bioethics) by Suzanne Holland, Karen Lebacqz, Laurie Zoloth
| | The Stem Cell Divide: The Facts, the Fiction, and the Fear Driving the Greatest Scientific, Political, and Religious Debate of Our Time by Michael Bellomo
| | The Stem Cell Controversy: Debating the Issues (Contemporary Issue Series) by Michael Ruse, Christopher A. Pynes
| | Stem Cell Research: Medical Applications and Ethical Controversy (New Biology) by Joseph, Ph.D. Panno
| | The Soul of the Embryo: An Enquiry into the Status of the Human Embryo in the Christian Tradition by David Albert Jones
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