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    Selecting traits that increase chances at a better life p... — Carmelics
    Home/Bioethics
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    Supports→Social injustice cannot result from selecting or editing for traits that increase people's chances at a better life, because traits contributing to inequality are unlikely to promote wellbeing.

    Selecting traits that increase chances at a better life promotes wellbeing.

    Bioethics
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    Bioethics

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    Traits that contribute to inequality are unlikely to promote wellbeing.

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    Hearing is a trait linked to a wider range of life plans.80%Social injustice cannot result from selecting or editing for traits th...75%All-purpose traits provide broad benefits that serve a child's interes...74%Savulescu's claim that inequality-promoting traits cannot promote well...73%

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    Some have denied that social injustice could result from selecting or editing for particular traits that increase people’s chances at a better life (Savulescu 2001). To the extent that those traits contribute to inequality, the argument goes, it is unlikely that they could promote wellbeing (Savulescu 2001, 424). This claim seems, however, either irrelevant or false (de Melo-Martin 2017). Prospective parents choosing certain traits for their children could do so without realizing that they are a

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