I hope you're not talking about human cloning. And by genetic modification, I hope you don't mean playing God. Other than that, I see nothing wrong with either. But before you get all hot about the playing God argument I'm using, you'd best figure out what I mean first, because I very much doubt that it's mainstream.
Ignoring the other part of this conversation (about principles, I don't think that was getting us anywhere as I think you were being somewhat contradictory), I'd like to focus on this.
Well, what do you mean by "playing God"?
Where does the "natural" (and therefore moral I would assume) human ability to adapt our environment to our needs become "playing God" (which you clearly believe to be immoral)?
Why is cloning or genetically modifying a human any different to cloning any other natural material? What does the Bible say about any of this?
This is the perfect example of where morality is an intersubjective construction - we face a new situation entirely, through a societal discourse between scientists, ethicists, theologians, politicians, medical practioners etc. consenus is created in an area where before we had little to no guidance because we had no need for guidance.
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