Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 176
Trim: 6½ x 9
978-0-8476-8982-8 • Paperback • May 1998 • $23.95 • (£17.99)
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Moving toward the Clonal Man: Is This What We Want?
Chapter 3 Don't Worry: A Brain Still Can't Be Cloned
Chapter 4 The Wisdom of Repugnance
Chapter 5 Begetting and Cloning
Chapter 6 Cloning Human Beings
Chapter 7 Whose Self Is It, Anyway?
Chapter 8 Scientific Discoveries and Cloning: Challenges for Public Policy
Chapter 9 Wrongful Life, Federalism, and Procreative Liberty: A Critique of the NBAC Cloning Report
Chapter 10 Dolly's Fashion and Louis's Passion
Chapter 11 Clone Mammals . . . Clone Man?
Chapter 12 Will Cloning Harm People?
Chapter 13 The Confusion over Cloning
Chapter 14 Our Children, Our Selves: The Meaning of Cloning for Gay People
Chapter 15 Index
A highly accessible introduction to the scientific, moral, and political questions surrounding cloning.
— Choice Reviews
Original.
— Forecast
Flesh of My Flesh distinguishes itself from the multitude of 'cloning' books on the market. An enjoyable overview of the ethics of cloning. . . . A good introduction to the subject.
— Bulletin of Medical Ethics
The volume is a very useful one for the general reader and the specialist in bioethics. The essays are accessible and highly instructive. Anyone interested in recent developments in reproductive technologies will find it engaging.
— Gabriel Palmer-Fernndez, Youngstown State University; Religious Studies Review
This collection of papers is well suited to anyone wanting a diverse set of accessible opinions about human cloning.
— Christian Perring Ph.D, editor, Metapsychology Review
A well-edited and invaluable resource for those who want to develop a comprehensive and rationally defendable ethical position on the issue of cloning humans.
— Ethical Theory and Moral Practice