quiz 5 Flashcards
What to do with frozen embryos if they are not needed raises significant issues because of the moral status of the embryo. The available alternatives include:
keeping the embryo in storage indefinitely
b.
destroying them
c.
using them for experimental purposes
Reproductive technology refers to various medical procedures that are designed to alleviate infertility. These procedures include:
Intrauterine insemination
According to the law established by court precedent, genetic surrogates are recognized legally as the mother of the children they bear because they have:
The key biological components of motherhood
b.
The genetic connection
c.
the gestational environment.
The term reproductive technology refers to various medical procedures that are designed to alleviate infertility. These procedures include:
Intrauterine insemination
b.
In vitro fertilization
c.
Surrogate motherhood
Technological innovations that clearly improve the lot of humankind and help alleviate the effects of the entrance of sin into the world are considered:
Part of God’s common grace
b.
Part of his general blessings of the effect of sin
The weight of biblical teaching on reproductive technologies suggests that:
Third-party contributors are not the norm for procreation.
Intrauterine insemination (IUI) using the husband’s sperm would appear at first glance to present any difficult moral issues,
IUI is increasingly being done in conjunction with multiple-ovulation drugs that are used with IVF
b.
That creates a risk of the woman becoming pregnant with major multiples.
c.
On average eight to ten eggs are hyper-stimulated to be released in a given cycle
What to do with frozen embryos if they are not needed raised significant issues because of the moral status of the embryo which include:
Keeping the embryo in storage indefinitely
b.
Destroying them
c.
Using them for experimental purposes
Reproductive Technologies make it possible for a woman to no longer be pregnant without necessarily ending the life of the child.
true
Throughout the Bible, children are viewed as a gift from God to be received with open arms and without specifications.
true
The most serious objection to commercial surrogacy is that it constitutes the purchase and sale of children and, thus reduces the children to objects of barter by putting a price on them.
true
Mosaic embryos can produce children who will have a lifetime of medical issues
true
For pro-choice, the disposal of embryos presents a complex moral dilemma.
false
The goal of achieving a family makes almost any technological option morally acceptable
true
In gestational surrogacy, the surrogate has a genetic relationship to the child.
false
In Catholic teaching it is believed that technology cannot replace normal sex in the process of procreation.
true
A foundational fencepost in the Bible is that procreation was designed to occur within the context of a stable heterosexual, permanent, permanent monogamous marriage.
true
Some critics of In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) argue that freezing embryos is intrinsically morally problematic and freezing the embryo is unethical.
true
For Catholics’ understanding of God’s design, every sexual encounter has the potential for conception, and every conception has the potential for childbirth and parenthood.
true
Unless the maternal rights are transferred to the surrogate mother, the genetic contributor is the mother of the child.
true