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First Cloned Rhesus Monkey Reaches Adulthood

  • #Diseases & conditions
  • #China
  • #Medicine & healthcare
  • #Genetics & heredity
  • #Research
First Cloned Rhesus Monkey Reaches Adulthood
story
JAN 2024
Image copyright: Scott Olson/Getty Images News via Getty Images
story last updated JAN 2024

The Spin

Narrative A

Monkey cloning has a long and controversial history, but given that a cloned rhesus has lived happily and healthily for over two years now, the potential medical benefits should be our focus. Though it won't happen tomorrow, scientists can now work on developing medicine for conditions like visual impairment, deafness, heart disease, and metabolic conditions, as well as extremely rare diseases that cause immense suffering.

The Times of India

Narrative B

Many countries have excluded primates from scientific experiments due to their similarity to humans concerning abilities and feelings. If cloning monkeys are allowed to continue, not only will such torture of these creatures increase, but so will the market for buying and selling them into captivity. Whenever a creature is cloned and experimented on, it shows the humans using it have little care for their moral status — if this carelessness is normalized on monkeys, treating humans this way could be next.

The Conversation

Metaculus Prediction


Articles on this story

Does the birth of a cloned monkey mean we could now clone people?
New ScientistAUG 2023
Cloned rhesus monkey created to speed medical research
BBC NewsAUG 2023
Scientists in China report cloned rhesus monkey has survived for two years
IndependentAUG 2023
Chinese scientists successfully clone a rhesus MONKEY for the first time - but experts say using the same technique to replicate humans is 'unjustifiable'
Daily MailAUG 2023