"All kinds of mischief is in the making," he says. "The more our knowledge increases, the worse it gets."
Dyck says the abuse of the technique leads to dangerous areas, mentioning the possibility of using clones to form national armies.
"This could be seen as a kind of biological warfare," Dyck says.
Imagining a basketball team composed of "five Wilt Chamberlains on the court with back-up Wilt Chamberlains on the bench," Dyck asks, "Who will get the rebounds?"
In addition, Dyck says problems will arise among companies--people would need to be patented for corporations to remain competitive.
He says one result could be a mad scramble as companies vied for the patent to replicate the best cow or athlete extant.
Although Wilmut received his doctorate from Darwin College at Cambridge, his contributions to cloning may give a whole new meaning to Darwin's famous phrase, "the survival of the fittest."