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    A person is constituted by his body and his mind — they a... — Carmelics
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    Supports→A person has primary authority over what may be done to his body and mind

    A person is constituted by his body and his mind — they are parts or aspects of him

    Rights & Liberty
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    A person has primary authority over what may be done to his body and mindAny arrangement that denied a person primary say over his body and mind would be...Morality must recognize a person's existence as an independent being with ends o...

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    The body does not truly belong to a person.77%Human beings are embodied beings whose agency depends on use and contr...75%A person has primary authority over what may be done to his body and m...75%A person lacks autonomy relative to an unalterable aspect of themselve...74%

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    A person is constituted by his body and his mind. They are parts or aspects of him. For that very reason, it is fitting that he have primary say over what may be done to them—not because such an arrangement best promotes overall human welfare, but because any arrangement that denied him that say would be a grave indignity. In giving him this authority, morality recognizes his existence as an individual with ends of his own—an independent being. Since that is what he is, he deserves this recognit

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