Bioethics Stories

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bioethics

14 Stories

  • Not of Adam by mitDudelsack
    mitDudelsack
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      Reads 10
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    A young veteran must choose either to protect human experiments from their malevolent creators he is charged with guarding, or do his duty and aid in their destruction. Note: THIS STORY IS NOT FINISHED AND IS AWAITING REVIEW.
  • Legal Trends in Bioethics (Spring 2007) by Sigrid-Fry-Revere
    Sigrid-Fry-Revere
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      Reads 2
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      Parts 1
    Readers who learn of cases, laws, or regu- lations that they would like reported in this column are encouraged to e-mail Sigrid Fry-Revere at sfryrevere@cato.org.
  • Legal Trends in Bioethics Summer 2007 by Sigrid-Fry-Revere
    Sigrid-Fry-Revere
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      Reads 5
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      Parts 1
    GENERAL INTRODUCTION The laws governing bioethics issues are confusing and sometimes contradictory because of several types of tensions inherent in our legal system. Legislatures and courts work in different time frames and with different priorities. The U.S. constitutional guarantees of separation of church and state and individual rights make bioethics issues involving personal, moral, or religious convictions particularly contentious. Each state also has its own constitutional protections, some of which clearly mirror those in the federal Constitution and others that don't. Legislatures and courts play different roles in our constitutional republic. Legislatures are by nature democratic and can react relatively quickly to changes in the political climate. Courts, on the other hand, are inherently anti-democratic. As a matter of fact, their main con- stitutional function is to protect the rights es- tablished by our various constitutions from vio- lation by legislative action. Read more on SSRN https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/DisplayAbstractSearch.cfm
  • Through a Glass Darkly by RobinKers
    RobinKers
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      Reads 5
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    In an Ottawa lab, Dr. Malcolm Reiner secretly manipulates DNA to create mirror-image human life-hoping to birth a new evolutionary path. But when his twin daughters begin to exhibit unnatural powers and shadows that move on their own, science collides with something much darker. "Through a Glass Darkly" is a haunting science fiction tale about ambition, ethics, and the dangerous line between experimentation and control.
  • Men Could Become Pregnant! by RajRichard
    RajRichard
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      Reads 54
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    Men could become pregnant! What is the need for male pregnancies and how do we view male pregnancies from the Historic Christian perspective. Here...
  • Euthanasia & the 7 Dwarfs by WanSujaihahTsukushi
    WanSujaihahTsukushi
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      Reads 47
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    Scientific fairytales regarding Euthanasia which is a controversial issue in medical world. A simple way to deliver the idea through fun ways in adapting Snow White & The 7 Dwarfs storyline. #PlotTwist #Euthanasia #Bioethics #FairyTale
  • Legal Trends in Bioethics (Spring 2007) by Sigrid-Fry-Revere
    Sigrid-Fry-Revere
    • WpView
      Reads 1
    • WpPart
      Parts 1
    Readers who learn of cases, laws, or regulations that they would like reported in this column are encouraged to e-mail Sigrid Fry-Revere at sfryrevere@cato.org.
  • What Happens When We Die? by RajRichard
    RajRichard
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      Reads 5
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    Do dead people go to heaven or hell IMMEDIATELY after their death? What do the dead people do? Do they reunite with their loved ones upon death? Do the dead know what the living are doing? These questions are of practical importance. The doctrine of intermediate state seeks to understand the state or condition of the individual between their death and resurrection. The Bible offers us essential information
  • Synthetic Souls by AmeliaWrites64
    AmeliaWrites64
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      Reads 56
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      Parts 9
    Elias Ward was a scientist obsessed with one thing: Creation. Hidden beneath his lab was a secret project, his attempt to craft life from nothing. When his experiment succeeded, he didn't stop. He improved it. He perfected it. He played god. Years later, the children born from his "donations" are scattered across the world. They don't know him. They don't know each other. But they share one thing, a hexagon iris, and a strange unexplainable trait that defies logic. Elias spent his life tracking them down, bringing them together... to him. Because creation always demands reckoning.