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Can humans be trusted with control over genetics? - Michael Vazquez and Raye Ploeger
AI Summary
This thought-provoking video examines the ethical dilemmas surrounding preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) through the story of a deaf couple considering selecting for deafness in their child. Learners will encounter vocabulary from bioethics, philosophy, and disability studies, including terms like procreative beneficence, mere-difference view, and genetic intervention. The video provides excellent practice for understanding and discussing complex moral arguments, disability perspectives, and the philosophical language used in ethical debates about reproductive technology.
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Subtitles (32 segments)
DownloadAndre and Leslie are a deaf couple who have recently decided to have a child, and they’re considering using a process called preimplantation genetic diagnosis.
In PGD, an embryo is screened for genetic conditions before being transferred into the uterus, allowing prospective parents to exclude embryos with unwanted genetic conditions.
However, Andre and Leslie are considering using PGD to ensure deafness in their child.
While the couple is uneasy exercising such profound control over their child’s future, as deaf parents, they feel they could provide better guidance to a child that would share their lived experience and grow up immersed in deaf culture.
But is it ethical for these two to select for deafness?
The rise of genetic technologies like PGD have led philosophers to consider this kind of question.
And to make sense of these dilemmas, many thinkers rely on the “Principle of Procreative Beneficence.” Coined by philosopher Julian Savulescu, this principle says any prospective parent able to select their future child’s traits, should give their child the best chance at the best life.
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Key Vocabulary (21)
Unable to hear anything or unable to hear very well. It refers to a person who has a partial or total loss of hearing, either from birth or acquired later in life.
A young human being below the age of puberty or the legal age of majority. It can also refer to a son or daughter of any age in relation to their parents.
People refers to a group of human beings or the general public. It is the standard plural form of the word 'person'.
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