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34547930808
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See Nelson JL. The meaning of the act: Relationship, meaning, and identity in prenatal genetic screening. In: Hippocrates' Maze: Ethical Explorations of the Medical Labyrinth. Lanham, Md: Rowman and Littlefield; 2003:1-28. I discussed the same themes in the Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal (8, no. 2, and 10, no. 3), and in my contribution to Parens E, Asch A, editors, Prenatal Testing and Disability Rights. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press; 2000.
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See Nelson JL. The meaning of the act: Relationship, meaning, and identity in prenatal genetic screening. In: Hippocrates' Maze: Ethical Explorations of the Medical Labyrinth. Lanham, Md: Rowman and Littlefield; 2003:1-28. I discussed the same themes in the Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal (vol. 8, no. 2, and vol. 10, no. 3), and in my contribution to Parens E, Asch A, editors, Prenatal Testing and Disability Rights. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press; 2000.
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34547963013
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Prenatal testing for selection against disabilities
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Further references to this paper will be given in the text
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Mahowald MB. Prenatal testing for selection against disabilities. Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 2007;16:457-62. Further references to this paper will be given in the text.
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(2007)
Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics
, vol.16
, pp. 457-462
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Mahowald, M.B.1
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34547945718
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Preimplantation genetic diagnosis and selection would also seem to be covered by at least many of the considerations on the table here
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Preimplantation genetic diagnosis and selection would also seem to be covered by at least many of the considerations on the table here.
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34547937422
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I am well aware that very many pregnant women accept heavy burdens to promote their future children's best interests, and I greatly respect the fact that they do so. I do not for a moment think that most such women would do whatever they can to provide the smallest advantage to their fetus, with no thought for the needs or interests of themselves or of other people who depend upon them
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I am well aware that very many pregnant women accept heavy burdens to promote their future children's best interests, and I greatly respect the fact that they do so. I do not for a moment think that most such women would do "whatever they can" to provide the smallest advantage to their fetus, with no thought for the needs or interests of themselves or of other people who depend upon them.
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34547930220
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My thinking about these matters has been much influenced by discussions with my colleague Hilde Lindemann, particularly in connection with her recent work on abortion and moral luck. Responsibility for these particular conclusions is my own, of course
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My thinking about these matters has been much influenced by discussions with my colleague Hilde Lindemann, particularly in connection with her recent work on abortion and moral luck. Responsibility for these particular conclusions is my own, of course.
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