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| View Larger Image | The Stem Cell Dilemma: Beacons of Hope or Harbingers of Doom? | Hardcoverby Leo Furcht (Author), William Hoffman (Author)
| List Price: | $26.99 | | Price: | $20.51 | | You Save: | $6.48 (24%) | | | Available: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| | Binding: | Hardcover | | Publisher: | Arcade Publishing | | Edition: | 1st Edition | | Page Count: | 352 Pages | | Publication Date: | April 09, 2008 | | Sales Rank: | 798,747th |
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EDITORIAL REVIEWS | Product Description TodayÕs scientists are showing us how stem cells create and repair the human body. Unlocking these secrets has become the new Holy Grail of biomedical research. But behind that search lies a sharp divide. Stem cells offer the hope of creating or repairing tissues lost to age, disease, and injury. Yet because of this ability, stem cells hold the potential to incite an international biological arms race. THE STEM CELL DILEMMA will tell you everything you ever wanted to know about stem cells: what they are, how they work, and why their use has become so controversial. We are standing at a scientific crossroads, the likes of which the world has never seen. It is a moment that will change forever the practice of medicine and the future of life as we know it. |
CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 5.0 based on 1 review)
| Kirkus Reviews by Robert Hoffman 5 Stars August 25, 2008 From Kirkus Reviews
15 Feb 2008
Recipient of a "starred" review: A star is assigned to books of remarkable merit, determined by the editors of Kirkus Reviews
Timely, levelheaded investigation of stem-cell medicine.
Stem cells possess the power to regenerate and repair body tissue, Furcht and Hoffman (both: Laboratory Medicine and Pathology/Univ. of Minnesota Medical School) remind us. Some of that power has been tapped, for instance, in countering bone-marrow failure. But stem cells' theoretical potential to regenerate and restore all of the body's tissues, particularly via embryonic stem cells, will be fully realized, if ever, only after extensive research. Nothing is starry-eyed in this plainspoken, well-tuned text. Although researchers are unveiling the mystery of stem cells everyday, and much lies in the province of possibility, the authors aver that those possibilities are based on good science, which they capably explicate for the reader. Their treatment of the stem-cell issue is thoroughgoing, acknowledging that embryonic stem-cell research raises bioethical as well as biological questions, and that economic considerations play a role in its development. They treat the ethical issue with respect, applying a cross-cultural perspective to everything from designer babies to the commodification of life. They make a case for continued research with some intelligent form of governance: "Ethical lines move all the time within the polity, subject to the dynamics of the polity--that is, politics." The denial of federal funds, they fear, will contribute to the brain drain of researchers from the United States, despite infusions of state, philanthropic and venture capital. They also warn of the technology's dual use: "To understand the immune system enough to re-create it is to possess the potential biological power of annihilation"--a threat only knowledge can check.
Noting that the biorevolution gives humankind a potentially vast power to expand the boundaries of life, the authors ask, "Are we...prepared to understand that power, seize it, and use it wisely?" Their cogent survey gives readers the tools to address that daunting question.
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SIMILAR PRODUCTS |

| 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 (Author)
There has been much recent debate about the merits, dangers, and nature of stem cell research. Some see in it the answer to every debilitating disease known to man, while others see it as a step away from human cloning. While the battle has raged, research is moving ahead, and California has already passed a measure that will give $3 billion in support to stem cell research. But as politics, religion, and the media weigh in on this complex issue, more and more of the scientific reality...
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| Stem Cell Now by Christopher Thomas Scott (Author)
The essential account of the most important scientific advance—and most volatile ethical debate—of our time
While many believe stem cell research holds the key to curing a wide range of ailments, others see this research as opening a Pandora’s box that will devalue human life. In Stem Cell Now, Christopher Scott—executive director of Stanford University’s Stem Cells and Society Program—lays out the scientific and ethical issues surrounding this national ...
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| The Stem Cell Controversy: Debating the Issues (Contemporary Issue Series) by Michael Ruse (Editor), Christopher A. Pynes (Editor)
Stem cell research is headline news. Researchers are eager to move forward, state governments and private foundations are rushing to support it, and the sick and afflicted are desperate for its benefits. Yet powerful forces in our society—led by President George W. Bush—find it morally troubling and they are doing all in their powers to restrict its development beyond a very limited scale. Stem cells have the potential to develop into different parts of the body—skin, bone, nerves,...
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| Stem Cell Research: Medical Applications And Ethical Controversy (The New Biology) by Joseph, Ph.D. Panno (Author)
This is an informative reference to the technological advances, applications, and issues of stem cell research. The past few years have seen controversy and debate surrounding stem cell research. Because skin cells have the capability to divide - unlike most of the cells in our body - our skin can heal itself through the division of cells. Scientists have attempted to apply this concept to major organs, trying to see if stem cells can be used to make the repairs that post-mitotic cells cannot....
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| Cell of Cells: The Global Race to Capture and Control the Stem Cell by Cynthia Fox (Author)
Publication Date is March 26, 2007
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