Table of Contents

PBA350H: Pre-Born Human Rights Beyond Abortion

Stem Cell Research

First, let's start with this short explainer video about stem cells:

:?: From what you saw in the video, what would the ethical concerns be with the use of stem cells?

This background reading would be very helpful to have more knowledge and understand the context and be able to answer questions: https://www.mayoclinic.org/tests-procedures/bone-marrow-transplant/in-depth/stem-cells/art-20048117

Assisted Reproductive Technologies

This is a great overview from a pro-life perspective to get some background knowledge and answers to FAQ: https://www.masscitizensforlife.org/in-vitro-fertilization-frequently-asked-questions-answers

This video provides a 2min overview of different Assisted Reproductive Technologies:

Let's take three types of treatments for infertility

:?: From a right to life perspective, which of these are ethical or unethical?

There's also a concern about treating human children as commodities to be mass produced like objects. Is that really an approach that respects the dignity of each individual person, the human rights of each individual human being?

FIXME re: commodity culture https://www.endthekilling.ca/blog/2017/05/08/embryo-ashes/

FIXME CCBR position piece https://www.endthekilling.ca/blog/2018/11/22/in-vitro-fertilization-a-human-rights-perspective/

Cloning

Now that we've talked through IVF and embryonic stem cell research, there are a few things to say about cloning:

Embryo Adoption

This needs more polished notes, but the core for this section is:

FIXME really good chance to discuss this here, and opens the door up to vaccines because it raises cooperation in evil questions rather than killing questions

FIXME could probably turn this into its own seminar

FIXME Analogy to buying a slave to free them

Other questions:

FIXME need some background at the ready for Catholic objections from Donom Vitae and Dignitatis Personae, with responses from John Berkman and Charlie Camosy FIXME responses to the slightly psychotic view of some Catholics that we should just “thaw them, baptise them, and bury them”

FIXME Stephanie Gray gives the rescue-arguments for, and some (IMO bizarre) arguments against1), embryo adoption: https://youtu.be/mZNSD9pc_Zg?si=9LIR8T9K7lAZZzJa

Vaccines

Cooperation with evil diagram

1)
Stephanie's analogy about taking kidneys from your own children to help the other sick children seems seriously flawed, because she equates “sacrificing a window of opportunity for conceiving a new child / temporarily sacrificing the space where your new child is biologically supposed to live” with “taking necessary resources away from your own children”. But as pro-lifers who know that life does not begin before fertilization, how does it make sense to say that sacrificing a window of opportunity of fertility, for the sake of saving another baby's life, is the same thing as taking away from your children… when those children have not been conceived and therefore do not exist? A better analogy might be this: Suppose there is a newlywed couple in the United States during World War II, before the US has joined the war. They have heard about what the Nazis are doing and are increasingly concerned about innocent people being killed, so they prayerfully discern, and the husband volunteers to fight overseas. They are, at minimum, sacrificing a window of opportunity for conceiving new children because of his absence; at worst, they are permanently sacrificing that opportunity, because he could die overseas. Would we say that his actions are immoral, because he has a higher duty to his potential future children, and needs to stay with his wife so that they can welcome children? I would certainly agree with Stephanie that his actions are “extraordinary care” in this scenario and not something that can be demanded of him, but it seems ridiculous to say that he cannot go try to save other people's lives just because doing so means sacrificing opportunities for procreating with his wife.