Destiny's Deception

"It's no longer a question of if.
It's a question of when and where."

Lee Silver, Ph.D., reproductive biologist, Princeton University, discussing human cloning and replication.

Genetic experimentation has progressed from scientific theorem, to an ethical debate of unimaginable complexity and unpredictable consequence. Indeed, our innate curiosity to explore the unexplored has exceeded our capacity to understand the ramifications of what we might find.

In the past decade, we've witnessed unparalleled breakthroughs in deciphering DNA, as well as replicating and cloning animate life. Science has now set its sights not on the sheep, but the shepherd. In this brave new world of genetic predeterminism, the distinction between creator and created will fade to memory, ethics will be a liability to the almighty bottom line, and the unthinkable will become reality.

An excerpt:

The child looked older than nine, though pale and willowy. Her gaze seemed vacant. Not empty, but rather as if she were too deep in thought to pay attention to something as mundane as a having her picture taken. Melissa had short dark hair, cut just above the ears and straight across her forehead. Though Angela suspected that James and Olga Revkin were not her biological parents, their daughter at least looked part Russian.

And that smile . . .

A tear formed before she could stop it. Angela wasn't looking at a hellish experiment, but at a person—a young girl. The smile is what did it. Not the witless, toothy grin one might expect, but a haunting Mona-Lisa smirk revealing the uniqueness of her exquisite beauty. She smiled in return, imagining what the child might be thinking: 'Neener neener. I know something you don't and I'm not gonna tell.'

Angela wiped away the tear. "What did I expect?" she whispered. "Some kind of two-headed monster? She's so young, so pretty, so perfect . . . My God, Melissa, what have they done to you?"

1112683938
Destiny's Deception

"It's no longer a question of if.
It's a question of when and where."

Lee Silver, Ph.D., reproductive biologist, Princeton University, discussing human cloning and replication.

Genetic experimentation has progressed from scientific theorem, to an ethical debate of unimaginable complexity and unpredictable consequence. Indeed, our innate curiosity to explore the unexplored has exceeded our capacity to understand the ramifications of what we might find.

In the past decade, we've witnessed unparalleled breakthroughs in deciphering DNA, as well as replicating and cloning animate life. Science has now set its sights not on the sheep, but the shepherd. In this brave new world of genetic predeterminism, the distinction between creator and created will fade to memory, ethics will be a liability to the almighty bottom line, and the unthinkable will become reality.

An excerpt:

The child looked older than nine, though pale and willowy. Her gaze seemed vacant. Not empty, but rather as if she were too deep in thought to pay attention to something as mundane as a having her picture taken. Melissa had short dark hair, cut just above the ears and straight across her forehead. Though Angela suspected that James and Olga Revkin were not her biological parents, their daughter at least looked part Russian.

And that smile . . .

A tear formed before she could stop it. Angela wasn't looking at a hellish experiment, but at a person—a young girl. The smile is what did it. Not the witless, toothy grin one might expect, but a haunting Mona-Lisa smirk revealing the uniqueness of her exquisite beauty. She smiled in return, imagining what the child might be thinking: 'Neener neener. I know something you don't and I'm not gonna tell.'

Angela wiped away the tear. "What did I expect?" she whispered. "Some kind of two-headed monster? She's so young, so pretty, so perfect . . . My God, Melissa, what have they done to you?"

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Destiny's Deception

Destiny's Deception

by Joseph Driessen
Destiny's Deception

Destiny's Deception

by Joseph Driessen

eBook

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Overview

"It's no longer a question of if.
It's a question of when and where."

Lee Silver, Ph.D., reproductive biologist, Princeton University, discussing human cloning and replication.

Genetic experimentation has progressed from scientific theorem, to an ethical debate of unimaginable complexity and unpredictable consequence. Indeed, our innate curiosity to explore the unexplored has exceeded our capacity to understand the ramifications of what we might find.

In the past decade, we've witnessed unparalleled breakthroughs in deciphering DNA, as well as replicating and cloning animate life. Science has now set its sights not on the sheep, but the shepherd. In this brave new world of genetic predeterminism, the distinction between creator and created will fade to memory, ethics will be a liability to the almighty bottom line, and the unthinkable will become reality.

An excerpt:

The child looked older than nine, though pale and willowy. Her gaze seemed vacant. Not empty, but rather as if she were too deep in thought to pay attention to something as mundane as a having her picture taken. Melissa had short dark hair, cut just above the ears and straight across her forehead. Though Angela suspected that James and Olga Revkin were not her biological parents, their daughter at least looked part Russian.

And that smile . . .

A tear formed before she could stop it. Angela wasn't looking at a hellish experiment, but at a person—a young girl. The smile is what did it. Not the witless, toothy grin one might expect, but a haunting Mona-Lisa smirk revealing the uniqueness of her exquisite beauty. She smiled in return, imagining what the child might be thinking: 'Neener neener. I know something you don't and I'm not gonna tell.'

Angela wiped away the tear. "What did I expect?" she whispered. "Some kind of two-headed monster? She's so young, so pretty, so perfect . . . My God, Melissa, what have they done to you?"


Product Details

BN ID: 2940044785632
Publisher: Joseph Driessen
Publication date: 08/05/2012
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 596 KB

About the Author

Joe Driessen was born in Kaukauna, Wisconsin, a town of 12,000 just south of Green Bay. In 1974, at age 18, he joined the Navy. After a six year enlistment and many ports of call throughout the Pacific, he moved to St. Paul, Minnesota.

Joe has a Bachelor's degree in Psychology from the University of Minnesota, as well as a Master's degree in Management from St. Mary's University. Joe and his wife live in Apple Valley, Minnesota with two cats and two dogs. They have two grown children.

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