Embryonic stem cell research
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Embryonic stem cell research has the potential to open the floodgates of science, finding cures for a myriad of different cancers and diseases, saving millions of lives, and averting untold human suffering in the process. Despite the nearly boundless promise that stem cells offer, there is a potent ethical dilemma involved. Namely, research into stem cells requires the destruction of human embryos. While there indeed some powerful visceral arguments to be made concerning the sanctity of human life, I believe that there is an equally powerful ethically grounded argument which supports embryonic stem cell research. The principles of utilitarianism clearly justify research into embryonic stem cells. While some observers from the Christian right decry the embryoÆs destruction, the fact of the matter is that the embryos that would be used for this research are embryos which would have been frozen or discarded otherwise. In other words, embryonic stem cell research could eradicate vast amounts of human suffering at a marginal cost to societyùa cost that society was already going to bear. The utility of stem cell research makes it ethical and all too necessary. Stem cells are a kind of cell that has the ability to not only create more stem cells, but to generate other kinds of cells as well. While stem cells are present at all stages of human development, embryonic stem cells are unique in that they are pluripotentùthey have the ability to give rise to all types of ce
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Approximate Word count = 1042
Approximate Pages = 4 (250 words per page)
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