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Should people who face difficult decisions about conceiving and bearing children play the games new technology makes possible?
For many people, such question is irrelevant. For them, procreation is easy. But for others the possibilities are too complex to help people make decisions: should women who experience infetility take the risks involved in reproductive technology? If a couple have given birth to a badly malformed baby and conceive again, should they seck information about the fetus? Should we condone research leading to the alteration of genetic characteristics of generations to come? What if the technology could eliminate a fatal disease?
A growing number of men and women of faith face these questions. This book is for them, their children and extende families, their communities of faith, their clergy. The goal is not to tell people what to think but to clarify the quandaries that cause an increasing sense of urgency.
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