Publications
Research Topics
| HLI Research: Bioethics |
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Assisted Reproductionby Brian Clowes
In "Assisted Reproduction," from his book The Facts of Life, Dr. Brian Clowes discusses topics such as: the precursor—artificial insemination; in-vitro fertilization; option of microsurgery; ethical and moral implications; future assisted reproductive technologies; and is there a right to a child. For the Table of Contents with links to the full content of the chapter, click here...
Cloningby Brian Clowes
In "Cloning," from his book The Facts of Life, Dr. Brian Clowes discusses topics such as: therapeutic cloning; status of the human embryo; legislative proposals; stem cell research; billion dollar industry; the new eugenics and nazification of medical science; British regulations; and democracy and moral truth. For the Table of Contents with links to the full content of the chapter, click here...
Contraceptionby Brian Clowes
In "Contraception," from his book The Facts of Life, Dr. Brian Clowes discusses topics such as: definitions of contraception; method and user effectiveness rates; costs of various birth control methods; profitability of the “family planning” industry; condoms and venereal diseases; surgical and chemical sterilization; Catholic teaching on sterilization and contraception; and future technologies. For the Table of Contents with links to the full content of the chapter, click here...
Embryonic Selection and Reductionby Angelo Serra
Embryonic selection and embryonic reduction are two expressions introduced in the practice of "technically assisted reproduction" to indicate: first, the killing of a human embryo produced in a test tube before the transfer in utero, after observations and tests indicating that it will not develop into a normal subject; second, the killing of one or more human embryos in utero when, after the transfer of several embryos, more than one develops. Read More...
Euthanasiaby Brian Clowes
In "Euthanasia," from his book The Facts of Life, Dr. Brian Clowes discusses topics such as: definitions and types; advance directives; extraordinary or disproportionate measures; painkillers causing unconsciousness; the Bible and Catholic theology; the hospice alternative; Nazi Germany; Netherlands; United States; the purpose of human suffering; Kevorkian; and what can we do to fight euthanasia. For access to the full content of the chapter, click here...
Euthanasiaby Ignacio Carrasco de Paula
In contemporary usage, the term euthanasia does not simply mean the quest of palliative medicine to relieve pain, but the act of deliberately killing someone in order to end suffering for "merciful reasons". Appeal is made to the superior interest of the State for ulterior "justification" of such acts, since, it is claimed, that the State has sovereign power over the bodies of those of its members who have become useless to society. Read More...
Female Sterilizationfrom HLI's Pro-Life Talking Points Series Female Sterilization: An Ideal Weapon for Eugenicists. From a population controller’s view, female sterilization has many advantages: it is permanent. Once it is performed, the population controllers can forget about the woman’s health, because she is “taken care of.” Read More...
Fetal Experimentation and Tissue Transplantationby Brian Clowes
In "Fetal Experimentation and Tissue Transplantation," from his book The Facts of Life, Dr. Brian Clowes discusses topics such as: the moral dimensions of fetal experimentation and fetal tissue transplantation; examples of experiments conducted on preborn babies; why researchers value fetal tissue; the history of fetal organ harvesting; embryonic stem cell research; vaccines made from the tissue of aborted preborn babies; and harvesting organs from handicapped newborn babies. For the Table of Contents with links to the full content of the chapter, click here... Fetal Painby Brian Clowes
In "Fetal Pain," from his book The Facts of Life, Dr. Brian Clowes discusses topics such as: mercy for all but the preborn; when does fetal pain begin; the battle over partial-birth abortion; what happens to babies after they are killed; and fetal development—the nervous system. For the Table of Contents with links to the full content of the chapter, click here... Free Choiceby William E. May
The expression "free choice" is connected in today's public opinion with the struggle conducted by different groups in favor of liberalizing the laws on procured abortion in different countries. In the name of the right of the human person to his own body in order to realize his life's project, these groups asserted that a pregnant woman has the right to abortion, and that the law has to respect such a right. Read More...
Gendercide: Where Have All the Girls Gone?by Joseph Meaney
The greatest instance of deadly discrimination against women in recorded history is being ignored or even defended by radical feminists and others because they rank the freedom to abort higher than the right to life of girls that are selectively aborted. A staff working paper for the President's Council on Bioethics points out the cruel irony of pro-abortion feminists refusing to restrict the "right" to abort girls because of son-preference. Read More ...
Legal Status of the Human Embryo, Theby Rodolfo-Carlos Barra
Discussions about the humanity of the embryo, product of the male-female union, arise as one tries to formulate premises that facilitate the legalization of abortion and the practices that threaten the very existence of the new being. In this context, it became necessary to coin the term "pre-embryo." This procedure is not new. From antiquity, people have questioned the humanity of other persons every time it became necessary to use arguments to exploit or terminate them. Read More...
Miracle of Fetal Development, Theby Brian Clowes
In "The Miracle of Fetal Development," from his book The Facts of Life, Dr. Brian Clowes discusses topics such as: to what point of fetal development is abortion legal; milestones of fetal development; new and misleading medical terminology; abortionists’ attitude towards third-trimester abortions; and a clear danger to abortionists. For the Table of Contents with links to the full content of the chapter, click here...
Partial Birth Abortionby Jacques Suaudeau
The right to life of every human being is less and less protected by law. The universal scope of this right which was solemnly declared in 1948 and reaffirmed in 1989 in the International Convention on the Rights of the Child is whittled away more and more. This is notably illustrated by the tendency to legalize abortion and euthanasia. The particularly horrible technique of Partial Birth Abortion, to which President Clinton attached his name by vetoing bans against it, calls our attention to a new stage in the current anti-life escalation. The abortion termed "partial" is in fact an infanticide. Read More...
Quality of Lifeby Renzo Paccini
The term "quality of life" entered the medical vocabulary beginning in the 1950s. It gained ever greater importance in this field as time passed with improvements in medical resuscitation that could lead to overzealous or burdensome medical treatments and progress in the field of prenatal testing for fetal abnormalities. The ambiguousness of this expression poses many concrete problems to the extent that doctors tend to judge the "value" of their patients using a very subjective notion of "wellbeing". Read More...
What is Bioethics?by Marc Lalonde
There are different definitions of bioethics. Some see in bioethics nothing new: it is part of the perennial moral reflection about any intervention that man makes on man. Others see a true novelty in this reflection. Between these two positions there is another more balanced position, the personalist position, that considers not only life as an absolute value, but also looks at the whole person in his totality. Read More...
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