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The “Parental Love” Objection to Nonmedical Sex Selection: Deepening the Argument

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 August 2007

PETER HERISSONE-KELLY
Affiliation:
Center for Professional Ethics at the University of Central Lancashire, Preston, United Kingdom

Extract

In my paper “Parental Love and the Ethics of Sex Selection,” published in the previous issue of the Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, I set out to determine whether a plausible argument could be constructed in support of a common intuition about the ethics of sex selection. The intuition in question is that sex selection for nonmedical reasons is incompatible with a proper parental love: that is, with the sort of love that a parent ought to have for her child or, equivalently, with the sort of love that someone accurately describable as a good parent will have for her child. I concluded that there is a prima facie compelling argument that fits the bill, though I did little more than introduce and set that argument out. In the current paper, my aim will be to subject it to closer scrutiny, by considering a number of possible objections to it. I will start by asking why the argument should be thought to apply only to sex selection for nonmedical reasons and not to cases in which selection is employed in order to prevent the birth of children with serious sex-linked genetic conditions.Thanks are due to Doris Schroeder for enlightening discussions of the issues raised in this paper. I also extend my thanks to Rachel Cooper, Sean Crawford, Neil Manson, and Alison Stone for comments and objections made during and after a paper that I gave on this topic at Lancaster University.

Type
HEALTH AND HUMAN RIGHTS
Copyright
© 2007 Cambridge University Press

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