-
777Die Freiheit zum Tode: Ein Plädoyer für den ärztlich-assistierten SuizidAufklärung Und Kritik 2 130-135. 2015.
-
1322The Ten Most Common Objections to Sex Selection and Why They Fail To Be ConclusiveReproductive Biomedicine Online 14 (1): 158-161. 2007.After its review of the Human Fertilization and Embryology Act of 1990, the Department of Health concluded that the British Parliament ought to outlaw sex selection for any but the most serious of medical reasons. This paper reviews the most frequently expressed objections to social sex selection and concludes that there is simply no moral justification for prohibiting parents from using sex selection technology to balance their families.
-
618Should Parents Be Allowed to Use Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis to Choose the Sexual Orientation of Their Children?Human Reproduction and Genetic Ethics 18 (7): 1368-1369. 2003.Extending the application of preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) to screen embryos for non-medical traits such as gender, height and intelligence, raises serious moral, legal, and social issues. In this paper I consider the possibility of using PGD to select the sexual orientation of offspring. After considering ®ve potential objections, I conclude that parents should be permitted to use PGD to choose the sexual orientation of their children.
-
2065Preconception Gender Selection: A Threat to the Natural Sex Ratio?Reproductive Biomedicine Online 10 (1): 116-118. 2005.This brief paper summarizes a series of postal investigations on the acceptance of selection for X or Y spermatozoa. These were conducted mainly in Germany but also in the UK, the Netherlands and the US. Selected families were approached with a series of questions about their wish to use sperm selection, and their choice of boys or girls. In general, large majorities opposed this approach for family balancing or sex selection on the basis of cost and inconvenience of the treatment. The view was …Read more
-
625The majority of German specialists in reproductive medicine opposes preimplantation sex selection for nonmedical reasons while recommending preimplantation sex selection for medical reasons, e.g. X-linked diseases like haemophilia.
-
Die Kunst, glücklich zu sein. Arthur Schopenhauer im Lichte der empirischen GlücksforschungSchopenhauer Jahrbuch 89 77-89. 2008.
-
1074Sex Selection: Sorting Sperm As a Gateway to the Sorting Society?In Janna Thompson (ed.), The Sorting Society: The Ethics of Genetic Screening and Therapy, Cambridge University Press. pp. 21-35. 2008.The Sorting Society: The Ethics of Genetic Screening and Therapy. Edited by Loane Skene & Janna Thompson, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2008.
-
902Preconception Sex Selection for Non‐Medical Reasons: A Representative Survey from the UKHuman Reproduction 18 (10): 2231-2234. 2003.BACKGROUND: Preconception sex selection for non-medical reasons raises serious moral, legal and social issues. The main concern is based on the assumption that a freely available service for sex selection will distort the natural sex ratio and lead to a severe gender imbalance. However, for a severe gender imbalance to happen, at least two conditions have to be met. First, there must be a significant preference for children of a particular sex, and second, there must be a considerable demand for…Read more
-
701Gender Preferences and Demand for Preconception Sex Selection: A Survey Among Pregnant Women in PakistanHuman Reproduction 22 (2): 605-609. 2007.BACKGROUND: In its recent report 'Human Reproductive Technologies and the Law', the House of Commons' Select Committee on Science and Technology called for greater efforts to establish the potential demographic impact of sex selection across all sectors of UK society. Given the well-known preference for boys over girls among some communities, there is concern that a readily available service for social sex selection may upset the balance of the sexes. Of particular interest are the gender prefer…Read more
-
13Wer zur Hölle will schon in den Himmel?BoD. 2010.Erst kürzlich hat uns Papst Benedikt XVI. noch einmal an die Hölle gemahnt. Sie existiere wirklich. Und jeder, der seine Augen vor Gottes Liebe verschließe, werde sich schon bald darin wiederfinden. Mit seiner ebenso charmanten wie amüsanten Sammlung von Aphorismen zeigt uns Edgar Dahl, dass dies kein Grund zur Sorge ist. Schließlich würden wir uns in der Hölle in weit besserer Gesellschaft befinden als im Himmel. Denn wir würden dort auf Sokrates, Platon und Aristoteles, Holbach, Hume und Schop…Read more
-
934Sex Selection and Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis: A Response to the Ethics Committee of the American Society for Reproductive MedicineHuman Reproduction 15 (9): 1879-1880. 2000.In its recent statement 'Sex Selection and Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis', the Ethics Committee of the American Society of Reproductive Medicine concluded that preimplantation genetic diagnosis for sex selection for non-medical reasons should be discouraged because it poses a risk of unwarranted gender bias, social harm, and results in the diversion of medical resources from genuine medical need. We critically examine the arguments presented against sex selection using preimplantation geneti…Read more
-
1197Procreative Liberty: The Case for Preconception Sex SelectionReproductive Biomedicine Online 7 (4): 380-384. 2003.Preconception sex selection for non-medical reasons raises serious moral, legal and social issues. The main concerns include the threat of a sex ratio distortion due to a common preference for boys over girls, the charge of sexism, the danger of reinforcing gender stereotypical behaviour in sex selected children, and the fear of a slippery slope towards creating designer babies. This paper endeavours to show that none of the objections to preconception sex selection is conclusive and that there …Read more
-
686Evolution, Morality and the Law: On Valerie J. Grant’s Case Against Sex SelectionProceedings of the First International Conference on Bioethics in Human Reproduction Research in the Muslim World 21 (12): 3303-3304. 2006.