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Opinion: Beyond safety questions, gene editing will force us to deal with a moral quandary

By the time gene-editing services arrive in the marketplace, I hope that people around the world will have developed a more sober attitude towards genetic technology.
A slide from He Jiankui's presentation at the Human Genome Editing Conference in Hong Kong.

After a Chinese scientist announced this week the birth of twin girls whose DNA he had altered many months earlier when they were microscopic, single-cell embryos, condemnation of this previously secret experiment was swift and absolute. Scientists and ethicists from around the world called it “premature” and “irresponsible.”

The majority of this criticism is motivated by major concerns about safety — we simply do not yet know enough about the impact of CRISPR-Cas9, the powerful new gene-editing tool, to use it create children. But there’s a second, equally pressing concern mixed into many of these condemnations: that gene-editing human eggs, sperm, or embryos is morally wrong.

That moral claim may prove more difficult to resolve than the safety questions, because

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