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    There can be humans in whom these rational capacities are... — Carmelics
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    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Supports→Some humans are not persons and are not owed recognition respect.

    There can be humans in whom these rational capacities are altogether absent.

    BioethicsMoral Responsibility
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    Moral ResponsibilityBioethics

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    Rights & Liberty1 linkedVirtue Ethics

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    Recognition respect for persons is grounded in rational capacities for moral age...Some humans are not persons and are not owed recognition respect.

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    The rational capacities that ground personhood could in principle be p...86%Non-rational beings lack will and intellect and are therefore incapabl...83%If, insofar as we are rational, we must will to develop capacities, th...80%Despite this rational capacity, the ends they seek are often worthless...79%

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    There are several important consequences of the Kantian view of the scope of moral recognition respect for persons as persons. First, while all normally functioning human beings possess the rational capacities that ground recognition respect, there can be humans in whom these capacities are altogether absent and who therefore, on this view, are not persons and are not owed respect. Second, these capacities could, in principle, be possessed by beings who are not biologically human, and such being

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