Author(s)
Smith, Kevin R.Keywords
KillingPersonhood
Suffering
Philosophical Ethics
Biohazards of Genetic Research
Animal Experimentation
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http://hdl.handle.net/10822/520344Abstract
I examine the process and outcomes of animal genetic manipulation ('transgenesis') with reference to its morally salient features. I consider several objections to transgenesis. I examine and reject the alleged intrinsic wrongness of 'deliberate genetic sequence alteration,' as I do the notion that transgenesis may lead to human genetic manipulation. I examine the alleged wrongness of killing inherent in transgenesis, and suggest that the concept of 'replaceability' successfully justifies such killing, although not for entities deemed to possess 'personhood.' I examine 'significant suffering' associated with transgenesis and propose the radical conclusion that, although it would be wrong to prohibit animal genetic manipulation per se, utilitarians ought to support a 'default prohibition' on transgenic experiments that entail significant suffering.http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/biot.2002.16.issue-1
Date
2011-07-12Identifier
oai::10822/520344Bioethics 2002 February; 16(1): 55-71
http://hdl.handle.net/10822/520344