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Outlook on human cloning
As of now, the low rates of success make human cloning practically and morally unfeasible, for at least the near future. Although any research on human cloning would provoke a public backlash, presently, there is much research going on in cloning animals, and these would hopefully shed much light on improving the procedure in humans. In the following years to come, with more research being done on animals, society is most likely to become more accustomed to the idea of human cloning. It has been pointed out that there was a huge public backlash when the first test tube baby, Louise Brown, was born in 1979; yet now in vitro fertilization is widely accepted by society. Similarly, this seems to suggest that the same thing will happen with human cloning. Much of the fears and ethical concerns about human cloning has to do with the high failure rate of producing a viable clone. With time, science would have developed so as to remove these concerns, and would hopefully make human cloning more desirable.
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