Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 September 2009
Introduction
In-vitro fertilization techniques and pre-implantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) currently allow parents to select an embryo for implantation in a woman's womb to avoid the resulting offspring suffering from, or being a carrier of, an inherited genetic disorder. In the future, it may be possible to screen and select embryos for non-disease genetic traits or predispositions. As well, some moral philosophers anticipate technologies that will enable parents to create embryos with a reduced susceptibility to disease as well as with valued non-disease characteristics such as height, intelligence, heterosexuality, impulse control, resistance to alcoholism, maternal behaviour, extraversion and athleticism, to name a few. In this chapter, I will refer to all such reproductive and genetic selection techniques as ‘reprogenetic technologies’.
If science does deliver the knowledge necessary for parents to create embryos free from disease and with desired non-disease traits and predispositions, questions arise as to whether parents would be morally obligated to use such technologies or, if no such obligations exist, whether it might still be morally permissible for them to choose to use them. Even if obligations can be founded or parental choice justified, we must ask whether society has good reason to encourage or allow untrammelled parents to use the technologies or whether some restrictions or even prohibitions may be justified.
To explore these questions, I will examine two claims.
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