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Parental Responsibility In The Context Of Neuroscience And Genetics 1st Edition Kristien Hens

  • SKU: BELL-5838470
Parental Responsibility In The Context Of Neuroscience And Genetics 1st Edition Kristien Hens
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Parental Responsibility In The Context Of Neuroscience And Genetics 1st Edition Kristien Hens instant download after payment.

Publisher: Springer International Publishing
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.55 MB
Pages: 255
Author: Kristien Hens, Daniela Cutas, Dorothee Horstkötter (eds.)
ISBN: 9783319428321, 9783319428345, 3319428322, 3319428349
Language: English
Year: 2017
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Parental Responsibility In The Context Of Neuroscience And Genetics 1st Edition Kristien Hens by Kristien Hens, Daniela Cutas, Dorothee Horstkötter (eds.) 9783319428321, 9783319428345, 3319428322, 3319428349 instant download after payment.

Should parents aim to make their children as normal as possible to increase their chances to “fit in”? Are neurological and mental health conditions a part of children’s identity and if so, should parents aim to remove or treat these? Should they aim to instill self-control in their children? Should prospective parents take steps to insure that, of all the children they could have, they choose the ones with the best likely start in life?

This volume explores all of these questions and more. Against the background of recent findings and expected advances in neuroscience and genetics, the extent and limits of parental responsibility are increasingly unclear. Awareness of the effects of parental choices on children’s wellbeing, as well as evolving norms about the moral status of children, have further increased expectations from (prospective) parents to take up and act on their changing responsibilities.
The contributors discuss conceptual issues such as the meaning and sources of moral responsibility, normality, treatment, and identity. They also explore more practical issues such as how responsibility for children is practiced in Yoruba culture in Nigeria or how parents and health professionals in Belgium perceive the dilemmas generated by prenatal diagnosis.

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