It's been 10 years since the debut of CRISPR. The revolutionary gene editing tool has taken off, but scientists are still far from realizing its potential
ethical concerns about using the technology for eugenics and “designer babies.” If parents can one day pay scientists to edit their babies’ DNA, making them stronger and smarter, CRISPR could make the world even more unequal and prejudiced.
In 2018, Chinese researcher HEH JEE'-an-qway claimed he’d used CRISPR to make HIV-resistant children. Whether or not he succeeded, his work violated China’s National Health Commission rules, and he was. But there are some cases where using CRISPR on humans may be worth the risk.injecting CRISPR directly into living humans, aiming to repair a genetic mutation that causes blindness.; they’ve already seen promising results in various animal studies.
CRISPR has given science a tool to reliably tinker with the code of life. But the question remains: can we do so safely and ethically, while avoiding the unintended consequences of such power?
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