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The substance view: a critique.

Rob Lovering1

  • 1College of Staten Island/City University of New York, Staten Island, NY 10314 USA. robert.lovering@csi.cuny.edu

Bioethics
|February 3, 2012
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

The substance view argues that rational moral agency grants intrinsic value. This critique examines and refutes arguments that fetuses possess this capacity, challenging their moral standing.

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Area of Science:

  • Moral Philosophy
  • Bioethics
  • Metaphysics

Background:

  • The substance view posits that the capacity for rational moral agency is the basis for intrinsic value and moral standing.
  • This view implies that human fetuses, despite lacking exercisable agency, share moral status with adult humans.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To critically evaluate the substance view's claim that human fetuses possess the same intrinsic value and moral standing as adult human beings.
  • To analyze the reductio arguments against the substance view and assess the adequacy of its defenses.

Main Methods:

  • The study presents three reductio ad absurdum arguments targeting the substance view's conclusions.
  • It analyzes responses from proponents of the substance view and offers critiques of these responses.

Main Results:

  • The critique finds that the defenses offered for the substance view against the reductio charges are ultimately unsuccessful.
  • The paper details the substance view's concept of rational moral agency and its defense.

Conclusions:

  • The substance view's assertion that human fetuses have equivalent moral standing to adult humans, based on a root capacity for rational moral agency, is critically challenged.
  • The presented arguments and critiques suggest that the substance view fails to adequately justify its conclusions regarding fetal moral status.