Biological developments designed to replicate human DNA for the purpose of creating clones, have brought the ethical and controversial issue to new heights. The issue has raised awareness of the creations by introducing the topic into the media through novels and films. The question pertaining to what makes the human species humans has found itself sparking the interest of many science fiction novels. The novels send fictional characters on a journey to find themselves; however, what the characters find is that they're genetically created abominations. Kazuo Ishiguro’s novel “Never Let Me Go,” raises awareness of the biological debate through the conflicting eyes of Kathy H. Throughout the novel the reader is ingested by Kathy’s experiences with sexuality, consciousness, and conceptual thinking taught at Hailsham: through these feelings Kathy H. is suggested to be human: however, she lacks the ability of religious awareness. The feeling of sexuality Kathy H. experiences throughout the novel suggests her to be a human which is demonstrated by Van Huyssteen’s argument “sexuality and embodied moral awareness are tied directly to our embodied self-transcendence as creatures." When Kathy H. experiments with her sexuality she is portrayed as a human due to her sexual awareness. This feeling is represented throughout the human species and is taught at Hailsham in order to some extent socialize the clones according to Miss Emily: “Respect our physical needs, and how sex was a very beautiful gift” (Ishiguro 95). This message caused the students to gain a humane characteristic and sparked their interest for discovering their sexuality. The journey of investigating her sexuality is represented as a metaphor for the biological debate through Ishiguro’s statement: “we weren't at all kind towards any signs of gay stuff.” This metaphor demonstrates the indirect notion of the debate for cloning for scientific advancement, by comparing it to the lack of homosexual tolerance within Hailsham. The heat of the homosexual debate has intensified throughout the decade, just as Ishiguro acknowledges the growing intensity of the cloning debate through Kathy H.’s sexuality experiences. Kathy’s ability to obtain a conscious mind to look into self suggests her to be a human based on Van Huyssteen argument: “the evolution of characteristics tha