Ethical Dilemmas

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In the age of assisted reproductive technology (ART), ART is seen as the solution for overcoming infertility and other reproductive barriers. While courts in the United States have held that there is a fundamental right to procreate and a fundamental right to parent, what does reproductive rights mean for those who do not have heterosexual relationships and for those who do not wish to be in a relationship? In the presentation of his new book The End of Sex and the Future of Human Reproduction, Hank Greely conceives of a future where sex is no longer the source for creating babies. Led by revolutionary developments in genetics and stem cell research, future babies will be created through preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) and in vitro fertilization (IVF). While Greely views this future as inevitable, the use of PGD and IVF poses several ethical issues. The purpose of this essay is not only to explicate these ethical issues, but to engage with Greely’s presentation. In doing so, I will connect envision what Greely’s presentation would look like through a feminist lens. Before …show more content…

The first, was the safety of the babies. However, he believes that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has the power to check for safety. The second, was fairness in regard to who will have access, babies who are created using PGD and IVF being 10% healthier, gender balance and the potential for disability issues. The third concern for Greely is coercion; coercion between employer and insurer and coercion between partners. The last concern, is family relations, i.e., the parents knowing the child’s genome before the child is even born, the potential for 8 year olds, 80 year olds and dead females to become mothers, the parents’ expectations of who the child will become and unibabies – humans reproducing asexually. While Greely did mention ethical concerns, these concerns were not formed employing a critical feminist

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