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This 10 page paper provides an overview of the application of the natural rights argument. This paper integrates a view of the natural rights argument as it applies to the issue of privacy and its impacts on abortion and abortion law. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
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10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MBNatLaw.rtf
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Natural Rights Argument for Privacy and Its Effect on Abortion Research compiled Melody Bussey 11/2001 For More Information
on This Paper, Please Despite all our medical advances, it would seem that man is merely a monkey with a better grasp of calculus. The same questions
have continued to plague mankind since it was first realized that walking on two legs was preferable than walking on all fours. Who am I? What is the exact moment
at which life begins? Who has a right to tell me what to do? It has been decades since the first microscopic photographs showed live images of a fetus
as it developed inside its mothers womb. From that point forward our understanding of cognitive fetal development spiraled upward and sparked countless debates on the sanctity of life, its point
of origin, and moral, not to mention, ethical questions arose. Case after case is tried in major courtrooms around the world in an effort to answer the question of natural
rights. Natural Rights Defined Initially, the Constitution held an eighteenth century view of Man and natural law. Basically, the Constitution expressed the idea that Man was a rational being, with
free will, but accountable to the state and his community with the idea that the individual agrees to live by rules set by society. The eighteenth century model believed that
such things as knowledge, physical and mental health, and biological inheritance were out of a mans control, and depended more on chance, or the will of God. Basically, those things
not explainable were considered an act of nature or God......or, in other words, Natural Law. In Canada, a woman was placed on trial for posing a threat to her unborn
...