Becoming a Person

In Kant and Applied Ethics. Oxford, UK: Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 241–282 (2011)
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Abstract

This chapter contains sections titled: The Ancient Practice of Abortion, and Continuing Controversies Universalized Maxims Are Not Retroactive The Formula of Humanity: Appealing to Personhood Thomson and Boonin: The Personhood of the Fetus Does Not Matter The Elements of Personhood: Self‐Consciousness, Humanity, Responsibility An Attempt to Bring Fetuses into Kant's Moral Community: The Appeal to Kind Another Common Strategy: The Argument from Potential Do We Have Indirect Duties to Fetuses? No Fetuses, No Children The Need for a Pragmatic Concept of Personhood The Specter of Infanticide Kant's Appeal to God Problematic Implications of the Appeal to Personhood Our Kantian Heritage: Trouble with Those at the Margins of Personhood.

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