Thursday, March 21, 2019
Compaing Frankenstein by Mary Shelley and Arks and Genetic Bottlenec
Since the forenoon of time, science has been in the minds of men. In the story, Frankenstein, by bloody shame Shelley, Victor deals with the macrocosm of life as opposed to Arks and hereditaryal Bottlenecks by Harold J. Morowitz which denies the scientific validation of Noahs Ark. Science, in most cases, has interfered with human lives, especially in religion in the aspect of human copy. In reality, it is not just a interrogative sentence of science, it is a matter of science versus religion. How far will science go to allow human cloning which is a test of peoples religious beliefs? two Frankenstein and Arks and Genetic Bottlenecks provide readers with some similar and some different answers. First, Frankenstein, and Arks and Genetic Bottlenecks, deal with a similar issue that today people cognise as cloning. In Frankenstein film, Victor creates life out of dead bodies by reactivating the dead cells with chemicals and electricity, despite his professors war ning that creation of life is only in Gods hands. In Arks and Genetic Bottlenecks, Morowitz also discusses genes and how all different organisms do not have the same assortment of genes with exception of identical twins (760), and that genetic diversity is essential for the survival of all species. Though, today, cloning is a with child(p) issue which people are afraid of, Mary Shelley, in her time, had an paper that scientists might attempt something similar to cloning which instilled fear in the hearts of men, and made her write Frankenstein. A similar fear is generated by Dolly, the Sheep cloned in Scotland in 1997. According to the film, Human Cloning, this has made religious activists protest against cloning in fear that science would destroy mank... ...man. The question still system Are scientists going to learn . . . how dangerous is the acquirement of knowledge . . . (Shelley 154), or are they still obsessed with proving Harold J. Morowitz right? Works Cited Frankenstein by Mary Shelley. A play by Nick DiMartino, Direct. Moses Goldberg. Narr. Professor McNamar. Global stratum Production. WLIW21 Presentation. Class Movie. HSS 100-002. Fall Semester, March 22, 2002. Human Cloning Investigative Reports. Pres. aviator Kurtis. A & E Special Presentation February 4, 2002. Morowitz Harold J. Arks and Genetic Bottlenecks. Fields of read Motives for Writing. Sixth ed. Ed. Nancy R Comley et al. New York Bedford, 2001. Shelley, Mary. From Frankenstein. The Example of Science. Ed. Robert E. Lynch and Thomas B. Swanzey. capital of Massachusetts Pearson Custom Publishing, 2000. (152-156)
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