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刚才无意中看到了这篇6年前的旧闻,感慨良多。。。

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发表于 2007-6-12 02:53:07 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
钢材特别困倦,于是就躺下小睡了个把小时。大约半小时前,刚刚睡醒。。。在梦中似乎又看到了那些早已死去的人,似乎又看到了他们的音容笑貌和飒飒英姿。不知不觉之间,自己翻出了一篇六年前的旧闻,看着这篇旧闻,再来回味一下刚才的梦境,不觉恍然隔世。。。。。。
s

美国破获邪教“克隆人”实验室的台前幕后
http://www.sina.com.cn 2001年08月05日 11:23 中国新闻网

  中新网香港8月5日消息:今天此间出版的《文汇报》刊登署名“绿依”的长篇报道,披露了前不久美国警方破获邪教“克隆人”实验室的始末。

  就在不久前的6月底,美国政府一举端掉了一处信奉“外星人”的邪教――雷尔教派手中的克隆人实验室。这条看上去不太起眼的小新闻立即传遍了全球,各国都纷纷转载了这条颇让人震惊的消息。

  这条消息内容虽不多,却着实让世界,特别是从事克隆技术的前沿科学家们惊愕不止,黑手已经伸向克隆人的领域。

  7月9日,美国《新闻与世界报道》专门就此发表了该刊记者内尔.博伊斯和戴维.E.库珀兰的调查报告,首次详尽的披露了美国食品与药品管理局(FDA)的联邦调查人员一举侦破这个带有邪教色彩的克隆人实验室始末。

  实验室负责人的吹嘘成线索

  人们知道,美国人的克隆技术虽然走在世界前例,但是克隆人却是非法的。法律尚没有允许克隆人的实验,更谈不上可利用克隆人达到不可告人的目的。因此,美国FDA对克隆技术的跟踪监视是非常严密的。尽管如此,有人仍在地下从事秘密的克隆人的技术研究,而且已经取得了实质性的进展。

  今年3月,一位在美国生物学界颇有影响的生物学博士布里吉特.波伊塞利女士首次对外公开宣称,她主持的实验室已经取得了克隆人技术的突破性进展,有能力在未来几周克隆出一个人类胚胎。

  她介绍说,这个实验是帮助一位痛失出生才11个月男孩的父亲而做。这位前任州的立法者想重新找回自我,克隆自己。波伊塞利还吹嘘说,她的实验室如今应接不暇,已经接待了数十名妇女,她们都想自愿地提供卵子并自愿做克隆胚胎的代孕母亲。

  3月27日,美国FDA向波伊塞利的实验室发出了警告,不准从事克隆人的实验。

  如果是一般科学领域,那么这种吹嘘或者介绍根本不会引起FDA的注意,美国媒体每天不知道要刊登多少条与科学成就有关的消息,可是这一条新闻却是非同寻常,这是克隆人的技术,这是世界最前沿的领域,也是最富有争议的技术,它涉及到人类的道德伦理和医学的法律地位。

  因此,这一消息很快引起了FDA的密切注意。同时也引得美国国会大为震惊,宾西法尼亚州共和党众议员格林伍德代表众院能源与商业委员会立即写信给FDA,要求对波伊塞利的实验室及一些其它计划克隆人的实验机构进行调查。

  波伊塞利与宗教组织有染

  要弄清波伊塞利实验室克隆人技术的来龙去脉,首先得搞清楚实验室负责人波伊塞利的个人情况。FDA立即通过对该实验室的电话窃听,检查其往来的电子邮件以及对波伊塞利女士本人进行外围的调查,发现这起克隆人的实验并不简单,其背后隐藏着与一宗教组织的千丝万缕的关系。

  调查发现,波伊塞利女士是一位在美国生物界享有名气的生物学博士,曾在纽约克林顿的哈米尔顿大学从事过化学教学。长期以来,一直从事遗传生物学的研究与实验,并且取得了一些有影响的成果。不过,波伊塞利的身份却有两重性,虽然她表面上是个搞生物学实验的博士,可背地里她还有一个不可小视的吓人头衔,那就是一个叫雷尔教派的主教。

  据悉,波伊塞利的克隆人实验室隶属于美国内华达州沙漠地区的“基因复制公司”,该公司是由现居住在加拿大蒙特利尔的法国人奥里昂于1977年创立并在巴拿马注册的有限公司。

  据悉,现年53的奥里昂曾是法国赛车手和体育记者。1973年,奥里昂称他曾与外星人相遇过,并由此了解了人类起源的“真相”,于是改名为“雷尔”并创建了“雷尔教派”。波伊塞利女士后来就任该教派的主教。

  根据雷尔教派的教义,地球上的人类都是由外星人依照其自身形像在实验室里通过DNA技术“制造”出来的,其它所有的生物也是由外星人在2万5千年前通过这一技术“制造”的。

  据称,雷尔派在世界上85个国家拥有近5万名信徒,而且还接受过许多神秘捐赠,经济实力颇为强大。正是由于雷尔教派带有蒙蔽性,以科学为幌子,从事克隆人的技术研究,因此,一些科学家认为雷尔教派是一个危险的邪教组织,只不过人们目前对它的认识还不足而已。

  一举搞掉克隆人实验室

  由波伊塞利女士负责的克隆人实验室的最终目的就是为了克隆人类的“未来”,让世界变得“更美好”。波伊塞利的克隆人实验遭到了美国医学生物学界的强烈反对,波伊塞利却仍我行我素,自以为是,成立了一个由试管受精、细胞融合、生物化学和遗传学专家组成的四人小组,开始进行各项准备工作并发誓在今年让世界上第一个克隆人出世。

  在掌握了大量的证据后,美国FDA的联邦调查人员遂于6月30日突袭了波伊塞利领导的克隆人实验室,联邦调查人员以该实验室未获当局批准为由勒令其立即停止进行所有的有关克隆人的试验,同时要求波伊塞利签署一份申明,宣布在克隆人试验获得合法地位之前,该实验室不再进行这一试验。

  与此同时,位于波伊塞利家附近的纽约州西瑞克斯市联邦大陪审团还下令调阅其近年的电话通话记录和其它文件,对雷尔教派成员和“基因复制公司”的近年活动展开深入调查,一旦发现有违法行为,将对其提出起诉。

  不过,波伊塞利强调说,她以前从事的实验均是与克隆动物有关,而至于克隆人则完全是应那位失去儿子的父亲强烈的要求下进行的,为的是减轻那名男子的痛苦。不过,波伊塞利称,她决不会停止手中的克隆人的实验,即便不在美国,她也会到一个对克隆人实验没有法律约束的第三国进行类似的实验。

  据悉,在美国FDA的干涉下,雷尔教派已经打算到他国去从事克隆人的实验。目前已知另一个意大利的生育医生已经保证找到一个视克隆人为合法的第三国作为实验基地。这两个小组称,他们现在手中已经有了自愿想成为首个克隆人的实验者。

  要求早日立例禁止克隆人

  此次雷尔教克隆人的实险掀起的轩然大波,再次引起了美国人要求尽早出台禁止克隆人的法律的呼声。目前,全世界已经有19个国家立法禁止从事克隆人的实验,但素来推崇法律的美国却迄今尚未通过类似的法律。在美国,克隆人的实验必须事先基于安全的考虑得到FDA的批准,据了解,迄今为止,该机构还没有批准过一例这样的实验。

  在美国,政府不允许资助任何有意或无意的改造遗传基因的实验。据悉,虽然美国没有立法禁止这类研究和试验,但是却有法律条文规定政府不会拨款资助类似的试验。布什政府也于6月初表示,将支持一项旨在禁止一切形式人体克隆试验的提案。

  据悉,目前已有两项禁止克隆人的议案提交国会讨论。它们分别是禁止进行任何旨在复制人的胚胎的克隆实验和禁止克隆哪怕是用于研究的人类胚胎,并将克隆人定为联邦犯罪。后者比前者更为严厉。据悉,布什政府已经表示将支持后一项更为严厉的议案。

  舆论认为,一旦国会通过上述两项法律草案,美国在处理克隆人的案例中将有法可依。但是鉴于克隆人的技术具有非常大的隐蔽性而且世界各国在这方面的法律不尽相同,因此,法律在实施过程中仍将会遇到“执法难”的问题,而且禁止克隆的法律也会驱使那些执意克隆人的人士将实验室搬到国外去,那里禁止克隆人法对他们根本不起作用,所以美国国会的禁止克隆人的法律对那些死心踏地要搞克隆人实验的人来说限制还是比较有限的。

  正如波伊塞利女士所说的那样“我尊重这个国家的法律,但是我将继续从事克隆技术,哪怕将实验室搬到国外也在所不惜。”
 楼主| 发表于 2007-6-12 03:02:17 | 显示全部楼层
想到了他们已经不存在了,就让人伤感,不觉黯然泪下。。。

梦中的印象正在迅速退却,但是有几个场面还是能够记忆得起来

什么时候,什么时候才能够克隆出人来?

有朝一日,肯定去寻找这样的机构和团体
 楼主| 发表于 2007-6-12 03:07:38 | 显示全部楼层
Déjà vu
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
For other uses, see Déjà vu (disambiguation).

The term "déjà vu" (IPA:/deʒa vy/) (French for "already seen", also called paramnesia from the Greek word para (παρα) for parallel and mnimi (μνήμη) for memory) describes the experience of feeling that one has witnessed or experienced a new situation previously. The term was coined by a French psychic researcher, Émile Boirac (1851?1917) in his book L'Avenir des sciences psychiques (The Future of Psychic Sciences), which expanded upon an essay he wrote while an undergraduate French concentrator at the University of Chicago. The experience of déjà vu is usually accompanied by a compelling sense of familiarity, and also a sense of "eeriness", "strangeness", or "weirdness". The "previous" experience is most frequently attributed to a dream, although in some cases there is a firm sense that the experience "genuinely happened" in the past. Déjà vu has been described as "Remembering the future."

The experience of déjà vu seems to be very common; in formal studies 70% or more of the population report having experienced it at least once. References to the experience of déjà vu are also found in literature of the past, indicating it is not a new phenomenon. It has been extremely difficult to invoke the déjà vu experience in laboratory settings, therefore making it a subject of few empirical studies. Recently, researchers have found ways to recreate this sensation using hypnosis.[1]
Contents
[hide]

    * 1 Types of déjà vu
          o 1.1 Déjà vécu
          o 1.2 Déjà senti
          o 1.3 Déjà visité
    * 2 Scientific research
          o 2.1 Links with disorders
          o 2.2 Pharmacology
          o 2.3 Memory-based explanations
          o 2.4 Neural theories
    * 3 Non-scientific Explanations
          o 3.1 Parapsychology
          o 3.2 Dreams
          o 3.3 Reincarnation
    * 4 Related phenomena
          o 4.1 Jamais vu
          o 4.2 Presque vu
          o 4.3 L'esprit de l'escalier
    * 5 Popular references
    * 6 See also
    * 7 References
    * 8 External links

[edit] Types of déjà vu

According to Arthur Funkhouser there are three major types of déjà vu.[2]

[edit] Déjà vécu

Usually translated as 'already lived,' déjà vécu is described in a quotation from Charles Dickens:
“         We have all some experience of a feeling, that comes over us occasionally, of what we are saying and doing having been said and done before, in a remote time ? of our having been surrounded, dim ages ago, by the same faces, objects, and circumstances ? of our knowing perfectly what will be said next, as if we suddenly remember it![3]         ”

When most people speak of déjà vu, they are actually experiencing déjà vécu. Surveys have revealed that as much as 70% of the population have had these experiences, usually between ages 15 to 25, when the mind is still subjectable to noticing the change in environment.[4] The experience is usually related to a very ordinary event, but it is so striking that it is remembered for several years afterwards.

Déjà vécu refers to an experience involving more than just sight, which is why labeling such "déjà vu" is usually inaccurate. The sense involves a great amount of detail, sensing that everything is just as it was before and a weird knowledge of what is going to be said or happen next.

More recently, the term déjà vécu has been used to describe very intense and persistent feelings of a déjà vu type, which occur as part of a memory disorder.[5]

[edit] Déjà senti

This phenomenon specifies something 'already felt.' Unlike the implied precognition of déjà vécu, déjà senti is primarily or even exclusively a mental happening, has no precognitive aspects, and rarely if ever remains in the afflicted person's memory afterwards.

Dr. John Hughlings Jackson recorded the words of one of his patients who suffered from temporal lobe or psychomotor epilepsy in an 1889 paper:
“         What is occupying the attention is what has occupied it before, and indeed has been familiar, but has been for a time forgotten, and now is recovered with a slight sense of satisfaction as if it had been sought for. ... At the same time, or ... more accurately in immediate sequence, I am dimly aware that the recollection is fictitious and my state abnormal. The recollection is always started by another person's voice, or by my own verbalized thought, or by what I am reading and mentally verbalize; and I think that during the abnormal state I generally verbalize some such phrase of simple recognition as 'Oh yes ? I see', 'Of course ? I remember', but a minute or two later I can recollect neither the words nor the verbalized thought which gave rise to the recollection. I only find strongly that they resemble what I have felt before under similar abnormal conditions.         ”

As with Dr. Jackson's patient, some temporal-lobe epileptics may experience this phenomenon.

[edit] Déjà visité

This experience is less common and involves an uncanny knowledge of a new place. The translation is "already visited." Here one may know his or her way around in a new town or landscape while at the same time knowing that this should not be possible.

Dreams, reincarnation and also out-of-body travel have been invoked to explain this phenomenon. Additionally, some suggest that reading a detailed account of a place can result in this feeling when the locale is later visited. Two famous examples of such a situation were described by Nathaniel Hawthorne in his book Our Old Home[6] and Sir Walter Scott in Guy Mannering.[7] Hawthorne recognized the ruins of a castle in England and later was able to trace the sensation to a piece written about the castle by Alexander Pope two hundred years earlier.

C. G. Jung published an account of déjà visité in his 1952 paper On synchronicity.[8]

In order to distinguish déjà visité from déjà vécu, it is important to identify the source of the feeling. Déjà vécu is in reference to the temporal occurrences and processes, while déjà visité has more to do with geography and spatial relations.

[edit] Scientific research

In recent years, déjà vu has been subjected to serious psychological and neurophysiological research. The most likely explanation of déjà vu is that it is not an act of "precognition" or "prophecy", but rather an anomaly of memory; it is the impression that an experience is "being recalled".[citation needed] This explanation is substantiated by the fact that the sense of "recollection" at the time is strong in most cases, but that the circumstances of the "previous" experience (when, where and how the earlier experience occurred) are quite uncertain. Likewise, as time passes, subjects can exhibit a strong recollection of having the "unsettling" experience of déjà vu itself, but little to no recollection of the specifics of the event(s) or circumstance(s) they were "remembering" when they had the déjà vu experience. In particular, this may result from an overlap between the neurological systems responsible for short-term memory (events which are perceived as being in the present) and those responsible for long-term memory (events which are perceived as being in the past). In other words, the events would be stored into memory before the conscious part of the brain even receives the information and process it. This would explain why one is, if it ever comes to mind, powerless trying to twist the outcome of the event in order to create a paradox. The delay is only of a few milliseconds, and besides, already happened at the time the conscious of the individual is experiencing it.

Another theory being explored is that of vision. As the theory suggests, one eye may record what is seen fractionally faster than the other, creating that "strong recollection" sensation upon the "same" scene being viewed milliseconds later by the opposite eye. However, this one fails to explain the phenomenon when other sensory inputs are involved, such as the auditive part, and especially the digital part. If one, for instance, experience déjà vu of someone slapping the fingers on his/her left hand, then the déjà vu feeling is certainly not due to his/her right hand to be late on the left one. The global phenomenon must therefore be narrowed down to the brain itself (say, one hemisphere would be late compared to the other one).

[edit] Links with disorders

A clinical correlation has been found between the experience of déjà vu and disorders such as schizophrenia and anxiety,[9] and the likelihood of the experience considerably increases with subjects having these conditions. However, the strongest pathological association of déjà vu is with temporal lobe epilepsy.[10][11] This correlation has led some researchers to speculate that the experience of déjà vu is possibly a neurological anomaly related to improper electrical discharge in the brain. As most people suffer a mild (i.e. non-pathological) epileptic episode regularly (e.g. the sudden "jolt", a hypnagogic jerk, that frequently occurs just prior to falling asleep), it is conjectured that a similar (mild) neurological aberration occurs in the experience of déjà vu, resulting in an erroneous sensation of memory.
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