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Among all human practices, procreation seems the most paradoxical.
It starts as a fully personal choice and ends with the creation of
a new subject of rights and responsibilities. Advances in
reproductive genetics pose new ethical and legal questions. They
are expected to prevent the transmission of genetic diseases to
progeny and also to improve genetically-endowed mental and physical
attributes. Genetic selection and enhancement may affect a child's
identity, as well as the parent-child relationship. The authors are
committed to a pluralistic approach that captures all aspects of
this relationship in terms of moral virtues and principles. They
elucidate that most of the conflicts between parental preferences
and a child's rights could be resolved with reference to the
meaning and nature of procreation.
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