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Search Results for: abortion – Page 39

In his latest book, law professor David A. Strauss attacks the idea of originalism and champions the “living Constitution.” Matt Franck explains why he’s wrong.
The Tea Party taps into the full social and cultural power of transcendent moral appeals in a way that social conservatives have never been able to do. The first in a two-part series.
In an article adapted from his debate last week with Peter Singer and Maggie Little on the moral status of the “fetus,” Professor Finnis explains that outside of medical contexts use of the word “fetus” is offensive, dehumanizing, prejudicial, and manipulative. It obscures our perception of moral reality. Moral status is not a matter of choice or grant or convention, but of recognition, of someone who matters, and matters as an equal, whether we like it or not.
Custom and tradition, far from being necessarily irrational, are often the vehicles of guiding and binding reason.
A new resolution before Europe's leading human rights council attacks conscience and community.
Accepting the “liberal” definition on pregnancy can actually help clarify the morality of contraception, abortion, and embryo adoption.
An Executive Summary of the Statement of the First Annual Neuhaus Colloquium.
In order to protect the unborn, we need to recognize mistakes made in the past and work to remedy them in the present.
A Review of Clark Forsythe’s Politics for the Greatest Good
Recent events suggest that Commonweal and Timothy Jost need to reassess their arguments about health care and abortion
Kagan’s advocacy for a living constitution should kill her Supreme Court chances.
The new health care law has endangered longstanding protections on conscience. We must act to address them or risk creating a dangerous precedent.
Are market economies friends or foes of the environment?
The recent actions of New Jersey governor Chris Christie have stirred up a political storm, but they are a reminder of the principles that underlie our politics.
The fiftieth anniversary of oral contraceptives is a reminder of all the things the Pill lets us forget.
Sometimes a defense of shared liberal values can become the partisan promotion of one of liberalism's strands.
In a first-time feature, the editors of Public Discourse respond to the editors of Commonweal.
America’s abortion laws may inspire a dangerous provision in Kenya’s new constitution.
Much of our moral confusion comes from our failure to find a replacement for the Judaeo-Christian outlook that once animated the West. We need, and generally now lack, a philosophical understanding of human life.
The Supreme Court’s bad ruling in the DC handgun case may soon undergo a drastic and very damaging expansion.
A good deal of online commentary about a recent ecumenical statement misunderstands the nature of human reason.
The focus of social conservatives on family and human dignity is as necessary today as ever. Even if today's hot-button issues fade, social conservatism will still be a force in our political life
If citizens and politicians believe that victory is to the loudest, or to the most dramatic, then loud and dramatic they will be. The process of public discourse, by contrast, is often deliberative, difficult, and slow. Its participants must, on occasion, “dare to be boring.”
Pragmatic and moral considerations should not be allowed to distort science, nor should they distract philosophy from its pursuit of truth.