
doi: 10.1111/meta.12112
AbstractRecent arguments on the ethics of stem cell research have taken a novel approach to the question of the moral status of the embryo. One influential argument focuses on a property that the embryo is said to possess—namely, the property of being an entity with a rational nature or, less controversially, an entity that has the potential to acquire a rational nature—and claims that this property is also possessed by a somatic cell. Since nobody seriously thinks that we have a duty to preserve the countless such cells we wash off our body every day in the shower, the argument is intended as a reductio ad absurdum of the claim that the embryo should be afforded the same moral status as a fully developed human being. This article argues that this argument is not successful and that it consequently plays into the hands of those who oppose embryonic stem cell research. It is therefore better to abandon this argument and focus instead on the different argument that potentiality, as such, is not a sufficient ground for the creation of moral obligations towards the embryo.
stem cell research, inner power, potential, 170, rationality, embryo, potential person, rational nature, somatic cell nuclear transfer, stem cell, extrinsic potentiality, somatic cell, intrinsic potentiality, moral status of embryo
stem cell research, inner power, potential, 170, rationality, embryo, potential person, rational nature, somatic cell nuclear transfer, stem cell, extrinsic potentiality, somatic cell, intrinsic potentiality, moral status of embryo
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