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The Substance View: A Critique (Part 3).

Rob Lovering

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    |December 24, 2016
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    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    This critique examines the substance view, a theory of intrinsic value and moral standing. It addresses objections to its conclusions about fetal moral status and rebuttals to those objections.

    Keywords:
    Henrik Friberg-Fernrosextratheoretical moral propositionhuman fetusintratheoretical moral propositionintrinsic valuemoral standingsubstance view

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    Area of Science:

    • Moral Philosophy
    • Bioethics

    Background:

    • The substance view, defended by philosophers like George, Lee, Tollefsen, and Beckwith, posits a theory of intrinsic value and moral standing.
    • Previous critiques (Parts 1 and 2) raised objections to the substance view's conclusions regarding the moral standing of human fetuses compared to adults.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To present a third critique of the substance view.
    • To specifically address and object to Henrik Friberg-Fernros's rebuttals to prior objections against the substance view.

    Main Methods:

    • The critique employs reductio-style arguments.
    • It analyzes and refutes specific premises and counterarguments related to the substance view's ethical framework.

    Main Results:

    • Part 1 of the critique established objections to the substance view's conclusion on fetal moral status.
    • Part 2 detailed objections to the premises supporting this conclusion.
    • Part 3 focuses on dismantling Friberg-Fernros's defense of the substance view.

    Conclusions:

    • The critique aims to further challenge the validity and coherence of the substance view.
    • This ongoing examination seeks to refine understanding of intrinsic value and moral standing in bioethical discourse.