Controversial Princeton bioethics professor and philosopher Peter Singer is making waves with his article outlining the case for rationing in last week’s New York Times Magazine. This is the same Singer who advocated infanticide, proposing ...
http://www.ldsmag.com/ideas/090730life.html
Opportunity cost is the benefit of the next best alternative that is lost because of the chosen activity. For example, if there are two restaurants, A and B, and the decision is to go to restaurant A, then the opportunity cost would be th...
http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/706387/how_doe...
On one hand we have their Pro-Abortion believes that for them make it justifiable to bull a baby 90% out of the mothers womb, murder it in a brutal and monstrous way, and then call that an abortion and defend it as a woman’s right to choose...
http://www.madogre.com/Archives/July_11_16_2004.htm
No, you should never be able to buy a human, especially not me!
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Should_human_life_have_a_pric...
As a trial lawyer, I’m asked this question all the time: How do you put a dollar figure on a human life? There is no easy answer. Every human life has value and no amount of money can ever replace a life. These contradictory ideas are at t...
http://www.stlouisinjurylawblog.com/29
A few of you have asked if this sermon could be "published" somewhere. Instead, let me give credit where credit is due. Some of the thought flow, and two of the quotes I referenced, come from the book An Introduction to Biblical E...
http://lexfirstalliance.com/sermons.aspx
Quite to the contrary, I think that valuing human life for nothing other than its practical utility (i.e. "justice is efficiency," valuing people as nothing other than means to an end) borders nihilism. Kant, for instance -- and a...
http://www.reddit.com/r/reddit.com/comments/aez8r/ohio_...