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Informationen zum Autor Anthony Dyson Klappentext The development of biotechnology has produced nothing short of a revolution in our capacity to manipulate living things from single plant cells to human nature itself, and even to manufacture brand new life forms. This power to shape and create forms of life has sometimes been described as the power to 'play God' and this book is about the ethics of 'playing God' in the field of biotechnology. It is a vast field ranging from plant breeding, agriculture, animal breeding and experimentation to human genetics and genetic engineering. The essays in this book well illustrate both the extent of the difficult issues raised by biotechnology and their fascination and importance. The full gamut of moral dilemmas posed by biotechnology is covered, from the smallest cells through animals to the engineering of human beings. The book reflects a multidisciplinary and an international approach with authors drawn from a number of European countries and from North America, and from disciplines which include philosophy, agricultural economics, medicine, political theory, biology and cell biology, embryology, social policy and theology. This book combines the work of outstanding scholars in all these disciplines and presents an up-to-date and penetrating survey of the ethical problems in this significant and fast developing field. Zusammenfassung The development of biotechnology has produced nothing short of a revolution, both in our capacity to manipulate living things from single plant cells to human nature itself, but also to manufacture brand new life forms. Inhaltsverzeichnis Chapter 1 Modern Errors, Ancient Virtues, Stephen R.L. Clark; Chapter 2 Biotechnology and Agriculture, David Colman; Chapter 3 Genetic Engineering and the North-South Divide, Søren Holm; Chapter 4 The Fruits of Body-Builders’ Labour, Hillel Steiner; Chapter 5 The Moral Status of Extracorporeal Embryos, Bonnie Steinbock; Chapter 6 IVF and Manipulating the Human Embryo, Susan Kimber; Chapter 7 Manipulation of the Germ-Line, Janice Wood-Harper; Chapter 8 How to Assess the Consequences of Genetic Engineering?, Heta Häyry; Chapter 9 Who Owns MO?, Charles A. Erin; Chapter 10 What ‘Bugs’ Genetic Engineers about Bioethics, Peter R. Wheale, Ruth M. McNally; Chapter 11 Categorical Objections to Genetic Engineering —A Critique, Matti Häyry; Chapter 12 Biotechnology, Friend or FOE? Ethics and Controls, John Harris; Chapter 13 Genetic Engineering and Ethics in Germany, Ulla Wessels; Chapter 14 Genetic Engineering in Theology and Theological Ethics, Anthony Dyson;...