Figh Islami va padeideh shabieh sazi = Cloning and Islamic (Figh) perspective

Dublin Core

Title

Figh Islami va padeideh shabieh sazi = Cloning and Islamic (Figh) perspective

Author

Sadr, Seyed Shahabedin
Payvandi,Ali Asghar
Shabanzadeh, Ali Reza
Toushih, Mohammad

Publisher

20071100

Language

English

Publication Date

20071100

Abstract

Simulation or transcription which is called cloning derived from Greek word (clon) that means cutting, budding and proliferating. Cloning is the creation of an organism that is an exact process of creating a genetic copy of another. Cloning is the asexual process of creating an identical copy of an original organism. Cloning exist in nature in some animal species and is referred to as parthenogenesis. Reproductive cloning is a technology used to generate an animal that has the same nuclear DNA as another currently or previously existing animal. In a process called Ĝ£somatic cell nuclear transferĜ¤ or (SCNT) scientists transfer genetic materials from the nucleus of a donor adult cell to an egg whose nucleus, and thus its genetic materials, has been removed. Human cloning is the creation of a genetically identical copy of an existing, or previously existing human by growing cloned tissue from that individual. Cloning has been going on in the natural world for thousand years. A clone is simply one living thing made from another, leading to two organisms with the same set of genes. The Islamic views presented about cloning in this article are formulated with a necessary caution. The classical formulations based on the Qur'an and the Tradition provide no universally accepted definition of the term 'embryo' with which we are concerned in our deliberation today. Nor do these two foundational sources of the sharia lend themselves to recognize the modern biological data about the beginning of life from the moment of impregnation. A tenable conclusion, derived by rationally inclined interpreters of the above-cited verse of the Quran, suggests that as participants in the act of creating with God, human beings can actively engage in furthering the overall well estate of humanity by intervening in the works of nature, including the early stage of embryonic development, to prove human health.

Primary Classification

14.5

Secondary Classification

14.5;1.2;15.1

Primary keywords

cloning--[pri];Islamic ethics--[pri]

Secondary keywords

beginning of life;embryo research;embryos;Koran;Muslim religious scholars;nuclear transfer techniques;parthenogenesis;reproductive technologies;sharia

Subject

Iran--[pri]

Subject

fiqh--[pri]

Conference

First International Congress of Medical Law; Tehran, Iran; 2007 November 15-16; Shaheed Beheshti University of Medical Sciences

Journal Article

First International Congress of Medical Law, Shaheed Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Iranian Research Center for Ethics and Law in Medicine 2007 November 15-16

Link for Internet access

Primary Document Type

upd

Call Number

file

Corp. Author

Shaheed Beheshti University of Medical Sciences. Iranian Research Center for Ethics and Law in Medicine

Collection

Citation

“Figh Islami va padeideh shabieh sazi = Cloning and Islamic (Figh) perspective,” Islamic Medical & Scientific Ethics, accessed January 15, 2025, https://imse.ibp.georgetown.domains/items/show/34247.