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Remaking Eden by Lee M. Silver — book cover

Remaking Eden

by Lee M. Silver
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Overview

On February 27, 1997, a stunning announcement appeared in the British journal Nature: for the first time ever, a mammal—a lamb named Dolly—had been successfully cloned from an adult cell. Less than a week later, scientists reported the successful cloning of a rhesus monkey, a primate whose reproduction and development is almost identical to our own. With two bold and hitherto unthinkable strokes, science fiction was transformed into science fact, preparing the way for a miraculous event that is, in all probability, inevitable: the cloning of a human being.

A distinguished scientist and professor at Princeton University, Lee M. Silver reveals what awaits us in the brilliant light of the new day that is now dawning. REMAKING EDEN is a fascinating exploration of the future of reprogenetic technologies—a cautiously optimistic look at the scientific advances that will allow us to engineer life in ways that were unimaginable just a few short years ago. Indeed, in ways that go far beyond cloning, and that are at once more thrilling and more frightening.

This is a brilliant, provocative, and necessary book. For better or worse, it describes the likely future of humankind—beyond fears both reasoned and unreasonable, beyond unrealistic utopian visions—an extra ordinary journey into a rapidly evolving tomorrow that no man or woman can forestall, but that we must all recognize and understand. REMAKING EDEN is an essential primer for that tomorrow.

About the Author, Lee M. Silver

Lee M. Silver is professor of molecular biology and public affairs at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton Uni-versity, and author of Challenging Nature. He holds a Ph.D. in biophysics from Harvard University, and he lives with his family in New Jersey and New York.

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Editorials

Booknews

With current fertility technology producing septuplets in humans and cloning techniques yielding mediagenic sheep like Dolly, Silver molecular/evolutionary biology and neuroscience, Princeton U. leavens the ethical debates with cautious optimism over the directions in which genetic engineering may be leading: parent "designer" selection of their unborn's traits, enhancement of the human species, multiple parents, even pregnant men. In this context, his discussion for general readers on defining life becomes even more crucial. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

NY Times Book Review

Realistic, informed speculation by a geneticist and teacher of bioethics who finds the American polity so constructed that government can do little to control whatever potential parents desire and can afford; he's not at all sure that's bad, either.

Book Details

Published
December 1, 1997
Publisher
New York : Avon Books, c1997.
Pages
317
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780380974948

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