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    When a criterion systematically reflects a prior value ju... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→'Capacity to benefit' in healthcare resource allocation is a cloak for prejudice against disabled and elderly persons, not a neutral empirical criterion.

    When a criterion systematically reflects a prior value judgment that disabled lives are worth less, it is not empirically neutral.

    BioethicsJustice & Punishment
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    'Capacity to benefit' in healthcare resource allocation is a cloak for prejudice...Respectable bioethicists have explicitly asserted that the 'disabled life' is fu...

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    Treating lower capacity to benefit as a priori reflects the prejudice ...81%Some bioethicists treat lower capacity to benefit for disabled persons...80%Respectable bioethicists have explicitly asserted that the 'disabled l...79%'Capacity to benefit' in healthcare resource allocation is a cloak for...77%

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    Some disability advocates argue that there is no real dilemma here since “capacity to benefit” is merely a cloak for the prejudice that the life of disabled person, like that of the elderly, is of intrinsically less value and deserving of less effort to preserve or improve (Asch 2001). These advocates have a point since precisely this view can be seen in the pronouncements of respectable bioethicists who do assert that the “disabled life” is fundamentally inferior (Kuhse & Singer 1985; Singe

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