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QUEST FOR PERFECTION: The Drive to Breed Better Human Beings

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In Quest for Perfection, Gina Maranto traces the history of society's attempts to control human destiny by regulating birth outcomes. Drawing together material from the fields of animal behavior, paleontology, anthropology, embryology, genetics, and reproductive medicine, Maranto provides a riveting account of how the perfecting impulse has colored Western social and political thought and history. More importantly, she explores how the development of birth technologies, from artificial insemination in the 1800s to in vitro fertilization in the 1970s, was carried out by scientists who foresaw - and in many cases championed - the eugenical potential of manipulating sperm, eggs, and embryos.
Maranto reveals that eugenics, rightly reviled for the crimes committed in its name in Nazi Germany and elsewhere, is far from a dead enterprise. Today, in treating couples for infertility, medicine has edged closer than ever to the made-to-order baby. With the knowledge gained from the massive worldwide effort to map the human chromosome, the Human Genome Project, scientists will gain greater power to dictate the essential makeup of future children.
Promoted on therapeutic grounds, the enterprise of assisted reproduction has raised exhilarating and frightening from infants born without debilitating defects and inherited diseases to the likelihood that individuals and governments will decide which embryos are worthy of being brought to term based not on the sanctity of life but upon parental whim or societal fiat. Quest for Perfection is an important contribution to the debate over the ethical and political implications of attempts to direct our own evolution.

336 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1996

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Gina Maranto

4 books

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
11 reviews2 followers
January 28, 2009
Excellent book that spans a wide time span of human history of eugenics. From prehistory, ancient greeks, hebrews, egyptians, romans, middle ages and modern day, this book is entertaining and informative.
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February 14, 2013
Awesome for research on matters concerning cloning.provides a logical approach to understanding the issue
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