Purdy: Genetics and Reproductive Risk: Can Having Children be Immoral? Flashcards
1
Q
The many causes of misery
A
- genetic disease is hardly connected to most misery
2. so, we need to think generally about the morality of conceiving a child
2
Q
is it morally wrong to have a child with genetic risk factors?
A
- if one thinks abortion is morally wrong, then a yes answer entails avoiding any conception which carries that risk
- anti-abortion positions might entail that abortion to prevent a child with genetic risks is like killing imperfect people without their consent
- if one thinks abortion is morally permissible, then a yes answer entails that abortion to prevent this risk is morally permissible (perhaps obligatory)
3
Q
abortion and screening
A
- views of abortion can impact how one sees the morality of aborting to prevent miserable life
- yet it is possible to believe in the equal dignity of all humans while believing that everyone deserves a high quality of life
- therefore, it might be permissible to abort babies who will not have a high quality of life (565)
4
Q
the case of huntington’s disease
A
- if a person carries the defective gene, there is a fifty percent they will pass it on to their children
- disease usually sets in between ages of 30 and 50
- see symptoms on 566
5
Q
Optimists
A
- 50 percent chance life will be free of disease
- even if the child has the disease, it will have 30 or so years of disease-free living
- so, that’s enough pleasure in a life, isn’t it
6
Q
pessimists
A
- 50 percent chance is way too high
- the suffering after 30 years is not worth it
- what about the sense of dread during the first 30 years
7
Q
possible children and potential parents
A
- we ought to try to provide every child with a minimally satisfying life
- this principle can be supported by contractarian or utilitarian theories - a minimally satisfying life requires normal health
- note that normal health is somewhat culturally contextual - a life with huntington’s disease cannot attain normal health
- therefore, we ought not create children who can acquire huntington’s disease
8
Q
a question for purdy
A
- it is one thing to claim that we ought to provide some basic good
- it is quite another thing to claim that we should always avoid the situation in which the good is deprived or not easily provided
- doesn’t she need a claim like: “we are forbidden from creating non-minimally satisfying lives”?
9
Q
possible parents/children version 2
A
- we are forbidden from creating lives that are not minimally satisfying
- a minimally satisfying life requires normal health
- note that normal health is somewhat culturally contextual - a life with huntington’s disease can’t attain normal health
- therefore, we are forbidden from creating children who can acquire huntington’s disease
10
Q
possible children?
A
- do possible children have a right to be brought into existence?
- no, since they do not actually exist, they cannot be maltreated
11
Q
objection
A
right to reproduce is strong
12
Q
objection: right to reproduce is strong
A
- the value of experiencing family life
- continue the family line
- cement married life
- some of the desires to reproduce are questionable
- others can be satisfied in other ways
- therefore, the duty to not create lives that are not minimally satisfying is stronger