Sentences with phrase «ethical objections»

Stem cells from embryos (ES cells) could provide a wealth of new cells but spark ethical objections.
It's a dirty business, and when I raised ethical objections to it, I was told that I was naive.
However, clinical application of ES cells is confronted with ethical objections against utilising human embryos.
A type of «virgin birth» stem cell could be as powerful as embryonic stem cells but without the same ethical objections, and are being tested for Parkinson ’s
Crucially, the tissues can be generated without having to extract cells from human embryos, a major ethical objection that has obstructed stem cell research until now.
Accepting cash and also making an insurance claim is fraud, and — setting aside the obvious ethical objections — insurance companies are notoriously good at identifying and prosecuting fraud.
Huang says that the paper was rejected by Nature and Science, in part because of ethical objections; both journals declined to comment on the claim.
Whitehead once humorously summed up the ethical objection to substance theories by remarking, «I sometimes think that all modern immorality is produced by Aristotle's theory of substance.»
The Countryside Alliance was also cheered when Lord Brown said the ethical objection of the majority of people to fox hunting was not sufficient basis for finding the ban «necessary».
Biologists are optimistic that the problem can be solved — but ethical objections to human therapeutic cloning will remain.
He describes his results as a small step down the road to treatments for genetic diseases and insists that ethical objections are ridiculous at such an early stage.
He predicts that the techniques won't draw the ethical objections of mitochondrial DNA replacement therapy because «the mitochondrial DNA remains that of the mother.»
These cells seem to have similar abilities as ES cells in the lab, and iPS cells don't rouse the ethical objections of ES cells.
Lots of Australian scientific researchers have worked with cane toads, because they are very common in the suburbs of many coastal cities and towns, are easy to collect and keep, and there aren't the kind of ethical objections to removing them from the wild, or killing them, as apply to native frogs.
This is clearly an emerging field that will be of importance to the pharmaceutical industry, which has been reserved in embracing human embryonic stem cell technology until now because of the ethical objections from the US, where many of them have their main base.
Dr. Alan Flake, a fetal surgeon and the corresponding author for CHOP's Nature Communications paper, suggests that the ethical objections appearing in the press reflect a «lack of insight into the clinical context and the science that we're doing.»
«Conflating discussion on «Animal Rights» or «Environmental Issues», which are philosophical or ethical issues, with a discussion on nutrition is an unnecessary diversion, and in addition adds no value to the sum of our nutritional knowledge, simply because we can overcome the ethical objections to eating animal products by only sourcing them from ethical farmers and / or those who use sustainable farming methods....
Everybody has either skirted your question due to ethical objections or offered you vague.
As long as you don't have ethical objections you can enjoy butterflies, birds, and dolphin displays.
However, even if you are willing to ignore the ethical objections to telling lies, it is still a very short - term strategy.
By now it should be apparent that there are important procedural and ethical objections to some of the most common applications of Big Data.
We also address the ethical objections that are raised — the objections that nonlawyer ownership will undermine the relationship between the professional and the client, that undue pressure will be brought to bear on the lawyer, causing them to act unethically, etc..
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