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Introduction Introduction
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Genetics and its Implications for Human Self‐Understanding Genetics and its Implications for Human Self‐Understanding
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Biotechnology: Moral Concerns Biotechnology: Moral Concerns
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Biotechnology and Theology Biotechnology and Theology
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References and Suggested Reading References and Suggested Reading
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54 Biotechnology and the Religion—Science Discussion
Get accessRonald Cole‐Turner is H. Parker Sharp Professor of Theology and Ethics at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary.
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Published:02 September 2009
Cite
Abstract
While giving attention to the embryo question and indeed to the meaning of ‘playing God’, this article surveys more generally some religiously significant aspects of recent genetics and biotechnology. The first section considers what genetics suggests about human nature. The next section, on biotechnology, looks first at work on plants and animals, but moves quickly to human applications, from gene therapy to cloning and stem cells, asking about the moral implications. The final section offers a theological interpretation of genetics and biotechnology, reflective of Christianity but intended for a wider readership. The article also looks at the question of the human embryo and its role in research, the theological implications of the technological transformation of the human self, and how we are to understand in religious terms our new role in creation.
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