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ARTICLE |

Recombinant DNA: Science, Ethics, and Politics

William R. Barclay, MD
JAMA. 1979;241(19):2089. doi:10.1001/jama.1979.03290450079037.
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ABSTRACT

Among the many scientific discoveries that have occurred through the ages, a few have produced great technological advances, pronounced social changes, and entirely new perspectives on the world in which we live. Most of these discoveries have been in the fields of chemistry and physics, although a few have occurred in the biological sciences. Practically all such discoveries have been exploited and allowed to impact on society with minimum planning or regulation. Even the relationship between mass and energy and the use of this knowledge to produce energy from nuclear reactions has gone unregulated and unplanned, so we are now confronted with the awesome possibility of total destruction of all living creatures or, in another scenario, the failure to apply current technology to liberate our energy-starved societies.

Certainly we must rank the deciphering of the genetic code and the ability to produce recombinant DNA as among the most remarkable discoveries

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