Gregory Pence

from William and Mary and a Ph.D. from New York University, writing under visiting Australian bioethicist Peter Singer.

Pence taught a required course in bioethics for 34 years to 165 medical students at the University of Alabama School of Medicine.

), he is one of the few bioethicists who believes that human cloning should not be banned but rather accepted in modern society as a future tool for creating wanted children.

[8] His many books, and over 70 op-ed essays, explain his views about assisted reproduction, human cloning, and various topics in bioethics.

[18] His 2002 and 2020 tradebooks Designer Food and Overcoming Addiction were named Outstanding Academic Books by CHOICE magazine.