As a science fiction writer, I’ve spent a
lot of time thinking about how technology will change the way we live. I came
up with ten short essays about science fictional elements that will – almost
certainly – one day become science fact and published them as “The Future is Coming” on Kindle. The point of the
essays is that since I’ve spent time thinking about clones and AIs, I feel that
I’ll be okay when they do finally show up whereas most people will probably
freak out. My hope is these essays will get people to start thinking about the
future because, no matter what we do, it’s coming.
Of course, the only way people will know
about these essays is if they get a copy.
To increase the chance of that, I’m running a free promotion now through
Friday, April 8. So you can get some
glimpses of the future, just for the price of a click.
Here’s an excerpt from the essay “Cloning
Humans.”
Someday – almost certainly sooner than
anyone suspects – a human will be cloned. There will be protests, boycotts, marches,
condemnations, congressional hearings, etc., all for this one minor event. I
say minor event, and here is why.
The short term issues
The biggest problem human clones will face
comes from people watching too many bad science fiction movies. In those
movies, 99.9% of what they show of cloning is utter crap. In reality, clones
will not be mindless automatons who will blindly follow the orders of some
megalomaniac out for galactic domination. Nor will you run the risk of walking
into an alley where someone will jump you, and ten minutes later a clone will
walk out of the alley to steal your identity. And clones will not “remember”
the lives of their donors and do … whatever. A clone will just be another
human. That’s it. If they can escape the mental scaring caused by “parents” or
guardians bent on making them into exact duplicates of the people who donated
some DNA, they will be no more screwed up than the rest of us.
Cloning will – especially at first – be
extremely expensive. That combined with the fact that we already have over
seven billion humans made the old fashion way begs the question, what need is
there to create clones? Seriously, what will be the point? Yes, grieving
families will want to replace loved ones, and companies will take their money
to give them a clone who will have the same DNA as the person they lost. But
the clone – because they will have lived a different life – will not be the
same person. And yes, some historical figures will be cloned as well as the
best and brightest of various fields, but when the Einstein clone takes up
poetry instead of physics, what will be the point of continuing?
There will be clones, but they will make
up a miniscule fraction of the population. But a ton of legal and ethical
questions will surround them. Will the donor of the DNA have all the rights and
responsibilities of a parent? What recompense will people have if they are
cloned against their wishes? Will the donor be able to abort the clone, and if
so, how far into the cloning process will they be able to do that? If the donor
is Canadian but the cloning is done in the United States, will the clone be
Canadian, American, or have dual citizenship? Will a clone be able to become
President? It’s probably a safe bet that few – if any – of these questions will
be answered by the time human clones walk among us.
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