If you can concede that it has some moral value at all, and that the lines appear to you to be very…
It’s got worth, but it’s death is more of a sad thing that’s undesirable, but doesn’t gain the protections of human rights or anywhere near it.I also didn’t say the lines were blurry, I said the issue wasn’t a binary one and that it’s based upon situation. If the intent is for that embryo to become a child later, preservation remains a priority, but if it has to happen, termination is okay. For lab brown embryos that aren’t meant to become a fetus, they have the same moral value as the lab grown embryos of other animals, because they will both never be born. There’s no need for a “just in case” for something that won’t be born in the first place, there’s no nerves to feel pain or gain any assumption it’s conscious enough to care, that would be like worrying about human skin cells “just in case”. Ethicists have even recommended the expansion of the tjmeframe allowing embryo experimentation, because there is nothing to be said about the barely existent matter with human dna that will never amount to a human.
이 불쾌한 일 가장 먼저 응답 하십시오.