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Citations of:

Families – Beyond the Nuclear Ideal

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Bloomsbury Academic (2012)

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  1. What Do We Owe Our Genetic Relatives?Elizabeth Brake &Daniela Cutas -2025 -Journal of the American Philosophical Association:1-19.
    Do we owe anything to our genetic relatives qua genetic relatives? The philosophical literature has primarily addressed this question in the context of procreation. But genetic matching databases raise the question of whether we owe anything to previously unknown genetic relatives. This article argues that influential philosophical arguments regarding moral claims to know one’s genetic origins (sometimes referred to as a ‘right to know’) in the context of gamete donation have implications for a broader set of claims. First, these arguments (...) imply more than a claim to know the identity of a genetic relative; the interests which they invoke can only be satisfied through a relationship. Second, the scope of the claims is broader than tends to be acknowledged: even if procreators have special obligations towards their offspring, these arguments imply that weighty moral claims can be made against other genetic relatives in many different contexts. (shrink)
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  • Artificial gametes and the ethics of unwitting parenthood.A. Smajdor &D. Cutas -2014 -Journal of Medical Ethics 40 (11):748-751.
  • The moral status of the (nuclear) family.Daniela Cutas &Anna Smajdor -unknown
    The family is commonly regarded as being an important social institution. In several policy areas, evidence can be found that the family is treated as an entity towards which others can have moral obligations; it has needs and interests that require protection; it can be ill and receive treatment. The interests attributed to the family are not reducible to those of its members – and may even come into conflict with them. Using Warren's criteria for moral status, we show that, (...) although the status of the family is not explicitly described in terms of moral status, the way in which it is treated implies that it has such status. (shrink)
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  • Feminist bioethics.Anne Donchin -2008 -Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

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