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Engaging Bioethics
Exam 14: New Reproductive Technologies
Path 4
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Question 1
Multiple Choice
Proponents of the Unnaturalness Objection to IVF discussed in the text argue that
Question 2
Multiple Choice
In reply to the children's welfare objection to NRTs, defenders of NRTs argued that since without NRTs some children with disabilities would not exist, NRTs
Question 3
Multiple Choice
Which of the following best expresses the feminist critique of new reproductive technologies (NRTs) ?
Question 4
Multiple Choice
Which of the following falls within the so-called the simple case of IVF?
Question 5
Essay
Some ethical questions about NRTs concern the moral standing of the embryos that are created in vitro. What might conservative Natural Law theorists say about who owns the embryos, and about disposing of unused embryos by destroying or donated them to other individuals or labs? What's your own view on these matters?
Question 6
Multiple Choice
Given the evidence available, so far success in live births by reproductive cloning has been achieved
Question 7
Multiple Choice
In response to the feminist critique of NRTs, Marie Anne Warren argues that NRTs may
Question 8
Multiple Choice
According to Chapter 14, a main moral problem facing cases such as Nadya Suleman and the McCaugheys concerns
Question 9
Essay
In which respects are IVF and fertility therapy morally comparable, and in which different? Illustrate your answer with some cases from Chapter 14.
Question 10
Essay
Suppose some prospective parents decide to have offspring born at approximately the same time. Their plan is to use the wife's eggs and the husband's sperm for IVF embryos, which will be transferred to two surrogates for carrying simultaneous pregnancies to term. How might their decision be evaluated morally by Natural Law theorists and by classical utilitarians? What is your own assessment of the decision?
Question 11
Multiple Choice
Woman A plans to carry to term a pregnancy obtained by in vitro fertilization using her own donor eggs. If everything goes well, she will give the newborn to woman B, who will adopt it and rear it as her child. Woman B will then be what type of mother?
Question 12
Essay
Which factors and assumptions sometimes affecting surrogates could undermine their ability to give informed consent? How might Lori Gruen respond to a claim that surrogates tend to have diminished capacity for informed consent?