Molecular Biotechnology : Principles and Applications of Recombinant dna (4th Edition)


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Glick/Pasternak: Molecular Biotechnology, 4e
Fig. 1.03
1st Proof
Final
2nd Proof
3rd Proof
4rd Proof
FIGURE 1.3
The Farm, by Alexis Rockman. According to the artist, “The Farm explores 
the iconography of agriculture. The Farm is set on a wide-angled field with all its 
usual trappings—animals, fruits, and vegetables. The situation, however familiar, 
is far from predictable. A disproportionately enormous and savage cow has an 
overabundance of teats. The pig is a human organ factory. And the chicken, which 
boasts three pairs of wings and no feathers, is ready for basting. The fruit fly, the 
workhorse of many a genetic study, is present as is a mouse with a human ear car-
tilage projecting from its back.…Past, present, and future states are threaded 
together here with barbed wire, woven baskets and DNA.…The Farm shows how 
the bodies of these animals have been—and may one day be—transformed to suit 
our aesthetic, medical, gastronomic needs.” © Alexis Rockman, 2000. Reprinted 
with the permission of the artist.


12
C H A P T E R 1
• Will medical therapies based on molecular biotechnology supersede
equally effective traditional treatments?
• Will the quest for patents inhibit the free exchange of ideas among
research scientists?
These and many other issues have been considered by government 
commissions, discussed extensively at conferences, and thoughtfully 
debated and analyzed by individuals in both popular and academic publi-
cations. On this basis, rules and regulations have been formulated, guide-
lines have been established, and policies have been created. There has been 
active and extensive participation by both scientists and the general public 
in deciding how molecular biotechnology should proceed, although some 
controversies still remain.
Molecular biotechnology, with much fuss and fanfare, became a com-
prehensive scientific and commercial venture in a remarkably short time. 
Many scientific and business publications are now devoted to the subject, 
and graduate and undergraduate programs and courses are available at 
universities throughout the world to teach it. Even artists have depicted 
their perception of molecular biotechnology (Fig. 1.3). It could be debated 
whether the early promise of biotechnology has been fulfilled in the way 
that was predicted in a 1987 document published by the U.S. Office of 
Technology Assessment, which declared that molecular biotechnology is “a 
new scientific revolution that could change the lives and futures of . . . citi-
zens as dramatically as did the Industrial Revolution two centuries ago and 
the computer revolution today. The ability to manipulate genetic material 
to achieve specified outcomes in living organisms . . . promises major 
changes in many aspects of modern life.” It does, however, offer solutions 
to some serious global problems, including the spread of infectious dis-
eases, the burden of waste accumulation, and food shortages. The potential 
of molecular biotechnology to solve some of these imminent problems is 
the subject of this book.

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