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It is recorded in the monastic rules that a monk once performed an abortion on a girl; the Buddha judged his action seriously wrong, which incurred him the highest offense in the monastic rule. A monk committing this kind of wrongful deed must be expelled from the monastic community. The Buddha considered the embryo to be a person like an adult, so the monk who killed the embryo through abortion was judged by Buddhist monastic rules as having committed a crime equal in gravity to killing an adult. In the commentary on the rule stated above, it is stated clearly that killing a human being means destroying human life from the first moment of fertilization to human life outside the womb. So, even though the Buddha himself did not give a clear-cut pronouncement about when personhood occurs, the Buddhist tradition, especially the Theravada tradition, clearly states that personhood starts when the process of fertilization takes place.

Soraj Hongladarom , em Genomics and Bioethics: Interdisciplinary Perspectives, Technologies and Advancements
religion buddhism abortion personhood bioethics

This (...) had made me aware for the first time of the well-disguised myth that they and the academic institutions they represent are bastions of a free exchange of ideas. They are -but only of those ideas that don't 'rock the boat', that refrain from challenging hallowed taboos.

Jack Kevorkian , em Prescription: Medicide: The Goodness of Planned Death
medicine science taboos bioethics medical-ethics medicide

No, I'm the human here. I'm the life at stake. I'm the one with fingernails, who feels pain.Me.

Alicen Grey
gender feminism body politics abortion pro-choice feminist pregnancy bioethics gender-inequality fetus reproductive-rights reproductive-health wendy-davis

It’s not that I was categorically opposed to the idea of scientists and physicians using gene editing to introduce heritable changes into the human genome.

Jennifer A. Doudna , em A Crack in Creation: Gene Editing and the Unthinkable Power to Control Evolution
ethics bioethics gene-editing moral-perspective

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