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The Pros And Cons Of Pre-Implantation Genetic Diagnosis

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The element of excitement when procreating offspring ceases with the development of Genetic Engineering. Parents will no longer wonder if their child will have grandma’s curly brown mane or Uncle Todd’s piercing gray gaze. The scientific breakthrough in technology of Pre-Implantation Genetic Diagnosis (PGD), originally created to screen diseases in embryos, has now become tantamount to an online shopping cart for determining cosmetic traits. To the parents who wish to decide what their children look like, you may be headed in the direction of becoming Adolf Hitler Lite. Using reproductive technologies to determine cosmetic features borders on scientifically useless and irresponsible, as it is basically a guise to revive eugenics. The social philosophy of …show more content…

This was not available during Hitler’s Nazi regime in World War II, who instead sought to eradicate those with “bad genetics,” so PGD is categorically a welcome approach. However, the debate lies in, what is considered a harmful disease? There is alarming concern that:
The power to alter a child’s genetic makeup… [is being] regarded as simply an exercise in manipulating matter for a determined end. (“A Big Step”, par. 6). And also that, the technique of altering a fetus’s DNA could simply push parents to treat children as a commodity, like a perfect Build-A-Bear, rather than treat them as a gift… (“A Big Step”, par. 7).
The determined end being to make a child’s life easy, possibly too easy. Parents would be robbing themselves and their child the opportunity of being humbled and truly appreciating life merely because of the responsibilities a “disability” will cause them. There is a very fine line of ethics to where you stop helping versus creating a whole “perfect” human, a fine line that edges on a God

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