Orphan Black and Philosophy: Grand Theft DNA
In Orphan Black, several apparently unconnected women discover that they are exact physical doubles — they're illegally produced clones, and someone is having them killed. Law enforcement is powerless to help. The clones are forced to form their own Clone Club to defend themselves.

Orphan Black raises philosophical issues, as well as ethical and policy questions. What makes a person unique? Should we have a say in whether we're cloned? Is it immoral to generate clones with built-in defects? What does the behavior of the Clone Club tell us about the nature-nurture debate? Is it relevant that most are heterosexual, one is a lesbian, and one is a transgendered male?

Orphan Black shows us problems of biotechnology that will soon be everyday issues. What kind of a future faces us when human clones are commonplace? Will groups of clones have a tight bond of solidarity, making them a threat to democracy? If the world is going to be taken over by an evil conspiracy, would a scientific cult like Neolution or a religious cult like the Prolethians be better? Should biotech corporations be able copyright human DNA? What rules of morality apply when you can’t trust the police?
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Orphan Black and Philosophy: Grand Theft DNA
In Orphan Black, several apparently unconnected women discover that they are exact physical doubles — they're illegally produced clones, and someone is having them killed. Law enforcement is powerless to help. The clones are forced to form their own Clone Club to defend themselves.

Orphan Black raises philosophical issues, as well as ethical and policy questions. What makes a person unique? Should we have a say in whether we're cloned? Is it immoral to generate clones with built-in defects? What does the behavior of the Clone Club tell us about the nature-nurture debate? Is it relevant that most are heterosexual, one is a lesbian, and one is a transgendered male?

Orphan Black shows us problems of biotechnology that will soon be everyday issues. What kind of a future faces us when human clones are commonplace? Will groups of clones have a tight bond of solidarity, making them a threat to democracy? If the world is going to be taken over by an evil conspiracy, would a scientific cult like Neolution or a religious cult like the Prolethians be better? Should biotech corporations be able copyright human DNA? What rules of morality apply when you can’t trust the police?
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Orphan Black and Philosophy: Grand Theft DNA

Orphan Black and Philosophy: Grand Theft DNA

Orphan Black and Philosophy: Grand Theft DNA

Orphan Black and Philosophy: Grand Theft DNA

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Overview

In Orphan Black, several apparently unconnected women discover that they are exact physical doubles — they're illegally produced clones, and someone is having them killed. Law enforcement is powerless to help. The clones are forced to form their own Clone Club to defend themselves.

Orphan Black raises philosophical issues, as well as ethical and policy questions. What makes a person unique? Should we have a say in whether we're cloned? Is it immoral to generate clones with built-in defects? What does the behavior of the Clone Club tell us about the nature-nurture debate? Is it relevant that most are heterosexual, one is a lesbian, and one is a transgendered male?

Orphan Black shows us problems of biotechnology that will soon be everyday issues. What kind of a future faces us when human clones are commonplace? Will groups of clones have a tight bond of solidarity, making them a threat to democracy? If the world is going to be taken over by an evil conspiracy, would a scientific cult like Neolution or a religious cult like the Prolethians be better? Should biotech corporations be able copyright human DNA? What rules of morality apply when you can’t trust the police?

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780812699203
Publisher: Open Court Publishing Company
Publication date: 08/16/2016
Series: Popular Culture and Philosophy , #102
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Richard Greene is a professor of philosophy at Weber State Universityin Utah. He is the coeditor of many volumes in the Popular Culture and Philosophy series, the most recent being Dexter and Philosophy.

Rachel Robison-Greene is the coeditor of Dexter and Philosophy and The Golden Compass and Philosophy. She is currently a Ph.D. candidate in philosophy at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. They both live in Ogden, UT.

Table of Contents

Thanks xi

Leda Thinkin' to Us… xiii

Part I "How many of us are there?" 1

1 Fearfully and Wonderfully Made John V. Karavitis 3

2 Go Ask Alison Daniel Malloy 15

3 When Clone Club Looks for Answers Johanna Wolfert Adam Barkman 25

4 Who Owns Clones? Rod Carveth 35

Part II "If we're genetically identical, do you get that little patch of dry skin between your eyebrows?" 47

5 The Human Being in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction Daniel Malloy 49

6 One Clone from Another Erik Baldwin 53

7 I Am and Am Not You Jeremy Heuslein 75

Part III "You want to grow a tail, that's your business." 85

8 Laughing in the Face of the Absurd Rob Luzecky Charlene Elsby 87

9 Variation under Ethics Rachel Robison-Greene 95

10 How Can Clones Disagree? Audrey Delamont 105

Part IV "You Know I Never would've got in if you'd said we were going to suburbia," 115

11 Leda, Castor, and Their Families Carmen Wright 117

12 Not Why but Who Sarah K. Donovan 127

13 Sisterhood's Back in Orphan Black Fernando Gabriel Pagnoni Berns Emiliano Aguilar 141

14 Re: Production Darci Doll 153

Part V "Your just broke the first rule of Clone Club." 165

15 The C-Word Rachel Robison-Greene 167

16 Is Sarah Manning Responsible for What She Does? Joshua Heter Josef Simpson 179

17 Dialog with the Buddha Christopher Ketcham 189

A Brief History of Cloning 203

References 213

The Clone Club 217

Index 223

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