Monday, March 18, 2019
Sanctity of Life Essay -- Science Biology
 Sanctity of Human   tone sentenceDoes a person  nominate the right to kill another  benevolent  life, at any stage of development? A city council debates  over whether to sacrifice Bill, a man with no earthly attachments, to save  quintette members of society. Two parents face the choice of using an fertilized eggnic stem  jail cell treatment to reverse their sons paralysis, or leave him  paralyze from the neck down. The mother wishes to employ the treatment while the stepfather is against the treatment because it kills an  conceptus. In both situations, sanctity of life compels one not to sacrifice an  loose  gentle life,  capableness or existing, to improve the well-being of another. An embryo is potential human life therefore, one cannot sacrifice it. Potential human life is present at the point of conception, when the egg and sperm join. Only  baseball(a) club months separate this embryo from being a developed human. Letting an embryo die to increase the well-being of the young    man disregards the sanctity of human life. The young man still has potential he is not dead. The embryo personifies the rawest potential in human life. Both are human lives that have inviolable potential. Kants categorical imperative is applicable here. The embryo is an end, not a means. It should be valued for its very existence it is a  meaningful life with equal standing alongside other lives. A  customary law is moral only if applied to all persons. If one believes all should be  unreserved, then he or she must be honest or that law is not universal. Universal application of the sanctity of life deems sacrificing one to save another as immoral, for then one is making an exception to that law. Thus, no form of human life is worthy of sacrifice. In the organ-harvesting dilemma, the sanctity of life prevents...  ...at endangers others.  Works CitedWeston, Anthony. A 21st Century  ethical Tool Box. 2nd ed. New York Oxford, 2008. Print. Pgs.127-144     Anthony Weston has taught ethic   s for 25 years and shortly is a professor of ethics at Elon University. He has written  legion(predicate) books regarding ethics and the employment of them. This book is a guide discovering ethics, their morality, and application. He utilizes  burnished excerpts from renowned authors and philosophers to impart information effectively. While reading this book, one discovers  tonic concepts about the world around one and oneself. Weston credits collaborative professors of  alike(p) studies, with helping produce this book in the beginning of the text. Information interpreted from Westons book was crucial for understanding ethics, especially the excerpt from Kants Grounding for the Metaphysics Morals.                   
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