***Sorry if my words are not well-chosen, e.g. "soft-science",
"confined", etc. I hope my point is understandable.
How does a genetic test even relate to an abortion in such a way that it could be prescribed prior?
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On Sun, Apr 1, 2012 at 10:51 PM, Simon Quellen Field <sfi...@scitoys.com> wrote:
> In a state where abortion is only allowed after rape, a genetic test to make
> sure the
> baby wasn't fathered by the husband, boyfriend or other consensual partner
> might
> (I almost said 'conceivably' here) be legally required.
s/baby wasn't fathered by the husband, boyfriend or other consensual
partner/baby wasn't fathered by someone other than the perpetrator of
the rape/
Let's be clear about the possibility of rapes happening within
marriages or committed relationships.
I occasionally spend time on working through bioethics issues, mostly
centered around privacy, civil rights, intellectual property &
biopiracy, epistemology, and the problematic concept of "naturalness"
in certain types of arguments against genetic engineering.
I don't write on it much, though - not enough hours in a day.
If you're interested in this, you may like (or already know?) the book
"Tactical Biopolitics" for a start.
More generally: do you already know what particularly interests you in
the area of bioethics?
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Cat