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Home  >  Conferences & Events  > 
Embryo Research and the American Character
Start:  Thursday, May 1, 2003  5:30 PM
End:  Thursday, May 1, 2003  7:30 PM
Location:   EPPC Conference Center
1015 15th St NW, Suite 900
Washington, DC

Over the past few years, a great debate has begun about the beginning of life and the ends of medicine. The debate has often overlapped with the deep divide over abortion rights, but it is becoming clear that the ethics and politics of embryo research present new challenges and new problems. Nearly two years after President Bush announced his stem cell decision, embryo research proceeds apace, with no regulation, in the private sector, while the silver bullet of immediate cures has yet to materialize. What are we to think and what are we to do? How do we separate the embryo research debate, the abortion debate, and the debate over new techniques for making babies like human cloning and genetic screening? What lessons do the great debates of the past-such as slavery and civil rights-have to teach us? Will embryo research be a major subject in the upcoming presidential election? And will anyone emerge to offer a compromise-one that both pro-lifers and pro-biotech researchers can accept?

Eric Cohen is director of the Project on Biotechnology and American Democracy at the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington, DC, and a senior consultant to the President's Council on Bioethics. His essays and articles have appeared in the Wall Street Journal, LA Times, Weekly Standard, Public Interest, First Things, and Commentary, and he is the co-editor (with William Kristol) of The Future is Now: America Confronts the New Genetics. He was previously a fellow at the New America Foundation and Managing Editor of The Public Interest. He is the founding editor of The New Atlantis, a new quarterly journal on technology and society.



New: Faith Angle Forum Videos

 Dr. Peter Berger spoke at EPPC's most recent Faith Angle Forum on the topic "Six Decades as a Worldwide Religion Watcher: Observations and Lessons Learned." Watch selections from his presentation and Q&A session here


M. Edward Whelan III
Blogging on the Courts

EPPC President Edward Whelan, the director of the program on The Constitution, the Courts, and the Culture, is a leading contributor to Bench Memos, National Review Online's award-winning blog on judicial nominations and constitutional law. You can read a list of all of his postings here.

Paul Mirengoff of the influential Power Line blog has said, "Blogs like NRO’s Bench Memos … enable legal super-stars like Ed Whelan to shoot down bad arguments against nominees within hours." 


The End and the Beginning

 EPPC Distinguished Senior Fellow George Weigel's latest book, The End and the Beginning: Pope John Paul II -- The Victory of Freedom, the Last Years, the Legacy is available now. Read a review of Weigel's book, by the Hoover Institution's Mary Eberstadt in the December 2010 issue of Policy Review, here. Meanwhile, Daniel Henninger of the Wall Street Journal discusses Mr. Weigel's new book in his column, here

The views expressed by EPPC scholars in their work are their individual views only and are not to be imputed to EPPC as an institution.
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