Publication | Closed Access
Newborn Infants and the Moral Significance of Intellectual Disabilities
38
Citations
27
References
1999
Year
Quality Of LifeDisabilityEducationDevelopmental DisabilitiesPsychologySocial SciencesIntellectual ImpairmentDevelopmental DisorderMoral SignificanceDevelopmental DisabilityChild Well-beingEarly Childhood DevelopmentIntellectual DisabilitiesChildren's RightMoral PsychologyChild DevelopmentMedical EthicsMoral Philosophical ArgumentsInfant DevelopmentPediatrics
This article presents moral philosophical arguments regarding life-saving medical treatment that may be more available to infants without disabilities than to infants with intellectual disabilities. The ideas are that children with disabilities are a burden to their families and to society and that a happy life may not be attainable for these children and their families. I argue that human well-being is not based merely on individual characteristics, but is a result of the individual's relation to other people. Further, children with disabilities are not inevitably a burden to their families or society. Accordingly, intellectual disability is not a sufficient reason for withholding life-saving treatment.
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