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Science 23 August 1974:
Vol. 185. no. 4152, pp. 653 - 663
DOI: 10.1126/science.185.4152.653

Articles

Brave New World?

Arno G. Motulsky 1

1 Department of Medicine and in the Department of Genetics, University of Washington, Seattle 98195

Recent developments in biology and medicine are raising new problems in the prevention and treatment of birth defects, and in research on these diseases. The problems include immediate issues such as genetic counseling, abortion for birth defects, the withholding of complex treatments from individuals in some situations, screening for genetic and other diseases, artificial insemination, and fertilization in vitro. Other problems, such as the dysgenic effects of modern medicine and the possibilities of cloning and gene therapy, are more remote. Each of these issues should be considered on its own merits and by its immediate and remote consequences rather than by a priori absolute criteria. Ways must be found to deal with these issues in a manner acceptable to most human beings. Open discussions and freedom from coercion are the best guarantees for ultimate success. The ethical human brain is the highest accomplishment of biologic evolution. By harmonizing our scientific, cultural, and ethical capabilities, the potentially achievable results can place us at the threshold of a new era of better health and less human suffering.


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
Impact of genetic manipulation on society and medicine.
A. Motulsky (1983)
Science 219, 135-140
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Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)