What is your answer?
What level of physical remaking do the authors NOT see as possible?
{ 1 } - Surgical procedures which would replace existing organs with transplants, biological constructs, or artificial organs that expand old functions or insert new ones into the body.
{ 2 } - Influencing embryological development to change the phenotype (the actual body) without changing the genotype (inherited characteristics).
{ 3 } - Using genetic engineering to produce types of human beings who form non-manipulative relationships with others and who are willing to die for their freedom.
{ 4 } - Using genetic engineering to produce any gene combination in the fertilized ovum, thus creating human beings by "recipe," or to clone existing individuals.
<= back | menu | forward =>
Directions: Click on a number from 1 to 4.
1 is wrong. Please try again.
What level of physical remaking do the authors NOT see as possible?
{ 1 } - Surgical procedures which would replace existing organs with transplants, biological constructs, or artificial organs that expand old functions or insert new ones into the body.
{ 2 } - Influencing embryological development to change the phenotype (the actual body) without changing the genotype (inherited characteristics).
{ 3 } - Using genetic engineering to produce types of human beings who form non-manipulative relationships with others and who are willing to die for their freedom.
{ 4 } - Using genetic engineering to produce any gene combination in the fertilized ovum, thus creating human beings by "recipe," or to clone existing individuals.
See p. 317.
<= back | menu | forward =>
2 is wrong. Please try again.
What level of physical remaking do the authors NOT see as possible?
{ 1 } - Surgical procedures which would replace existing organs with transplants, biological constructs, or artificial organs that expand old functions or insert new ones into the body.
{ 2 } - Influencing embryological development to change the phenotype (the actual body) without changing the genotype (inherited characteristics).
{ 3 } - Using genetic engineering to produce types of human beings who form non-manipulative relationships with others and who are willing to die for their freedom.
{ 4 } - Using genetic engineering to produce any gene combination in the fertilized ovum, thus creating human beings by "recipe," or to clone existing individuals.
See p. 317.
<= back | menu | forward =>
3 is correct!
What level of physical remaking do the authors NOT see as possible?
{ 1 } - Surgical procedures which would replace existing organs with transplants, biological constructs, or artificial organs that expand old functions or insert new ones into the body.
{ 2 } - Influencing embryological development to change the phenotype (the actual body) without changing the genotype (inherited characteristics).
{ 3 } - Using genetic engineering to produce types of human beings who form non-manipulative relationships with others and who are willing to die for their freedom.
{ 4 } - Using genetic engineering to produce any gene combination in the fertilized ovum, thus creating human beings by "recipe," or to clone existing individuals.
The authors would not hold that these are physical characteristics that can be changed by genetic engineering.
<= back | menu | forward =>
Before continuing, you might try some wrong answers.
4 is wrong. Please try again.
What level of physical remaking do the authors NOT see as possible?
{ 1 } - Surgical procedures which would replace existing organs with transplants, biological constructs, or artificial organs that expand old functions or insert new ones into the body.
{ 2 } - Influencing embryological development to change the phenotype (the actual body) without changing the genotype (inherited characteristics).
{ 3 } - Using genetic engineering to produce types of human beings who form non-manipulative relationships with others and who are willing to die for their freedom.
{ 4 } - Using genetic engineering to produce any gene combination in the fertilized ovum, thus creating human beings by "recipe," or to clone existing individuals.
See p. 317.
<= back | menu | forward =>
the end