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Cloning A Kerry Blueby Rick Ellis
So that a cloned Kerry would be a stranger, just like any other puppy or baby. We'd learn about each other and develop shared experiences which would predict the nature of our future relationship. On the purely physical side- yes, a particularly perfect Kerry (or human) could theoretically be replicated, we'd see that familiar shape, the gait, maybe even some traits or characteristics that are passed on by genes. But when you looked into those eyes you'd see a unique individual being, unlike any other. You wouldn't see the original dog. That fact might be the most difficult of all for us to deal with, as we contemplate a brave new world of cloned Oprah's and Hitler's and Mother Theresa's. When the clone is a close friend or a well known entity, we'd WANT to see that person in our clone. We'd expect it. We'd look for the special details that characterize our relationship with that entity. But those things, ultimately, are not physical. I believe that we are not pre-disposed to love (or not love) a specific person or an animal, it happens as a result of our relationship and the way it develops, usually over time.
Here's a scary scenario: I read a science fiction book long ago, I think it was called "Time Enough for Love", where an incredibly rich, very old man had himself cloned and sort of had the clone "on ice" waiting for the old man to die. At regular intervals the old man had his brain recorded (sort of like backing up your hard disk) so that when he died, the most recent recording could be "played" into the brain of the clone and he (the old man) would "live" again, almost all memories intact. True immortality. Maybe we're not so far away from this as we might like to think...
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