by Leroy Hurt | Aug 11, 2013 | Issues.Ethics, Sectors.SciTech.Bio
Via MSN: Hailed as a “cure in a Petri dish,” the research by scientists at the University of Massachusetts Medical School is the first to find that it may be possible to switch off the genetic material responsible for the condition that causes cognitive delays, heart...
by Leroy Hurt | Aug 11, 2013 | Issues.Ethics, Sectors.SciTech.Bio
Via MSN: Hailed as a “cure in a Petri dish,” the research by scientists at the University of Massachusetts Medical School is the first to find that it may be possible to switch off the genetic material responsible for the condition that causes cognitive delays, heart...
by Leroy Hurt | Jul 6, 2013 | Issues.Ethics, Sectors.SciTech.Bio
Via Reason and Popular Science: …the technology required for successful human-head transplantation is finally here, and that it could be used to help people with irreparable damage to their bodies and spinal cords. Would A Human Head Transplant Be Ethical? | Popular...
by Leroy Hurt | Jul 6, 2013 | Issues.Ethics, Sectors.SciTech.Bio
Via Reason and Popular Science: …the technology required for successful human-head transplantation is finally here, and that it could be used to help people with irreparable damage to their bodies and spinal cords. Would A Human Head Transplant Be Ethical? | Popular...
by Leroy Hurt | Mar 17, 2013 | Issues.Ethics, Sectors.SciTech.Bio
Via Business Insider: at a National Geographic sponsored TEDx conference, scientists met in Washington, D.C. to discuss which animals we should bring back from extinction. They also discussed the how, why, and ethics of doing so. They called it...
by Leroy Hurt | Mar 17, 2013 | Issues.Ethics, Sectors.SciTech.Bio
Via Business Insider: at a National Geographic sponsored TEDx conference, scientists met in Washington, D.C. to discuss which animals we should bring back from extinction. They also discussed the how, why, and ethics of doing so. They called it...