None have yet been created. We will have to wait and see.
2007-10-06 08:31:13
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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If you really want to know you will have to ask the government. They have the answer.
Current technology is still very basic and under-developed so there are limitations to the methods in human cloning which affects factors such as how long the cloned individual might live. However, none of the problems are insurmountable. Keep in mind that there are a number of ways to create clones, and there are likely to be better ways yet found as research continues. Most of the failures and problems we find in mammalian cloning today is due to simple errors in procedure. These things can and will get worked out over time.
What is a human clone? It is not likely to be a simple delayed twin. There are major difference between the embyrogenesis of twins and that of a true human clone. The primary difference is the degree of dedifferentiation at embryogenesis. There are other important differences as well having more to do with quantum physics than with biology. It is my belief that a true human clone with be identical in every way to that of the genomic donor, both physically and consciously. They would be one and the same, no doubt in my mind about it. That is exactly why the world governments made such a rush to ban this technology. Human cloning has the means to change the world in untold ways. Governments do not like such change.
Dolly the sheep: she did not die as a result of being a cloned animal. Dolly died, along with other sheep within her environment, from a common sheep related virual infection, nothing else.
One day, human cloning will prove absolutely necessary for the survival of our species and for mastering our biology and life span, and the universe itself.
2007-09-29 19:11:40
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answer #2
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answered by Bob D1 7
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Currently zero, since one hasn't been created.
If one was created then with current technology the clone would be lucky to make it to adulthood due to cumulative errors in the cell replication techniques that were used to create creatures like 'Dolly' the ship.
If the clone was made correctly, then it would share the same life expectancy as the human from which it was cloned. That is the idea.
Don't forget that if you create a clone you are making a baby, and it will have no memories of the original, it will grow up and develop in a manner constant with how it was raised, not the original and it needs to be educated, trained and put though all of life's experiences just like any other human child would be.
2007-09-29 15:28:06
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answer #3
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answered by Dan S 7
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Well, no human has been successfully cloned using the method that was used with "Dolly" the sheep. However, identical twins are natural clones of each other so I imagine their life expectancy is the same as the rest of the population.
Note that Dolly, the first mammalian clone died at age 6, although other sheep are expected to live until the age of 12.
2007-09-29 15:28:38
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answer #4
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answered by butlerr2 2
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in reality we are all clones, half is from our mother and the other from our father... but we have a better deal, we got the best of both worlds..
but if you're talking about laboratory grown human clones, its impossible because we dont have the technology to clone a spirit. and that's what distinguishes us from animals, animals dont have spirits.
2007-10-06 00:09:42
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answer #5
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answered by MOISES R 2
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One hasn't been created yet, the complexity of the human genome makes it difficult to make a successful clone.
2007-09-29 15:48:35
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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44 years
2007-09-29 15:28:44
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answer #7
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answered by Dee 4
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there is not one in exsistance
however the sheep clone dolly........didnt she die here recently?
2007-10-04 12:11:55
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answer #8
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answered by neongreensugar 3
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indepence on human
2007-10-06 16:18:02
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Didn't know there were any yet.
2007-09-29 15:25:38
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answer #10
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answered by cold_fearrrr 6
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