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  1. Disputes over moral status: Philosophy and science in the future of bioethics.Lisa Bortolotti - 2007 - Health Care Analysis 15 (2):153-8.
    Various debates in bioethics have been focused on whether non-persons, such as marginal humans or non-human animals, deserve respectful treatment. It has been argued that, where we cannot agree on whether these individuals have moral status, we might agree that they have symbolic value and ascribe to them moral value in virtue of their symbolic significance. In the paper I resist the suggestion that symbolic value is relevant to ethical disputes in which the respect for individuals with no intrinsic moral (...)
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  • (1 other version)Moral Status: Obligations to Persons and other Living Things.Mary Ann Warren - 1997 - Environmental Values 8 (4):517-521.
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  • Born alive: The legal status of the unborn child in England and the U.s.A.Gerard Casey - unknown
    On a charge of murder or manslaughter it must be shown that the person killed was one who was in being. It is neither murder nor manslaughter to kill an unborn child while still in its mother’s womb although it may be the statutory offences of child destruction or abortion. If however the child is born alive and afterwards dies by reason of an unlawful act done to it in the mother’s womb or in the process of birth, the person (...)
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  • Hard cases make bad law?M. Brazier - 1997 - Journal of Medical Ethics 23 (6):341-343.
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  • Must we have full moral status throughout our existence? A reply to Alfonso Gomez-lobo.David DeGrazia - 2007 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 17 (4):297-310.
    : Those who are morally opposed to abortion generally make several pivotal assumptions. This paper focuses on the assumption that we have full moral status throughout our existence. Coupled with the assumption that we come into existence at conception, the assumption about moral status entails that all human fetuses have full moral status, including a right to life. Is the assumption about moral status correct? In addressing this question, I respond to several arguments advanced, in this journal and other venues, (...)
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