Matches in Harvard for { <http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/002223477/catalog> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 33 of
33
with 100 items per page.
- catalog contributor b3200332.
- catalog created "1974".
- catalog date "1974".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1974".
- catalog description "I. The force of philosophy : 1. What is the role of philosophy in the abortion debate? The relevance of philosophy -- 2. What are the philosophies behind the pro-abortion movement? The philosophical roots in western culture for the pro-abortion stand -- 3. The United States Supreme Court Ruling: Roe vs. Wade, January 22, 1973, Abortion reform: Democracy or authoritarianism? -- 4. Is the pro-abortionist the realist and the anti-abortionist the idealist? Abortion and the realist -- 5. Is modern man losing his reverence for life? Does wonder ever cease? -- 6. Should civil laws concerning abortion allow maximum leeway for the exercise of private conscience? Conscience and civil laws".
- catalog description "II. Whose child is this? The nature of the foetus and the question of his rights : 7. What is the biological evidence? The merchants of Calumny -- 8. Along with the trees and the stars, does the foetus have a right to be here? The right to be born -- 9. What are the natural causes that bear upon the formation and development of the foetus and what moral implications do they carry? The foetus: his humanity and his rights -- 10. What are society's responsibilities to pregnant women and their developing unborn? Life and liberty: smoke and revolution -- 11. Why do some pro-abortionists feel that the foetus's being unwanted should override his being human? "All's right with the world" -- 12. Whose child is this? Does the foetus belong to his mother, his father, society, or himself? The answer lies in the form of a paradox: The polies of the paradox: Speakers for stereophonic thought".
- catalog description "III. Restoring missing values: the real values that have been ignored, obscured, or misplaced in the attempt to justify abortion : 13. Care -- The primacy of care -- 14. Personal love -- Is mankind an object of love? -- 15. Faith and the moral imagination -- Rape and abortion: the loss of faith; the death of the moral imagination -- 16. The right to one's future -- Time on my hands -- 17. The acceptance of natural human limitation -- Freedom as a one-eyed Jack -- 18. Involvement with one's neighbor -- The bland Samaritan".
- catalog description "IV. Glimpses of the transcendent: The transcendent implications of conception, pregnancy, and birth : 19. The union, peace, beginning, and hope represented by pregnancy -- Pregnancy: the peace movement without peer -- 20. Is abortion chosen for love or pity for the unborn? Abortion: love or pity? -- 21. Legal abortion includes the legality of putting an end to the human race -- Humanicide as a viable alternative -- 22. The logical and symbolic involvement of Christ in every act of abortion -- Abortion, Christianity, decide -- 23. "The birth of children is the death of parents" -- Birth and death: the rose palace and the fiery dragon -- 24. The woman's fear of not having control over her own body -- Me and my shadow".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references.".
- catalog description "V. The climate of culture: the climate of contemporary culture which has helped to breed and foster the pro-abortion mentality : 25. Is contemporary culture replacing the need to love with the desire for affluence? Modern fastidiousness: has it made love obsolete? -- 26. Are there any compelling or even legitimate reasons left to have a baby? Why have a baby, anyway? -- 27. Is the foetus merely a population statistic? The playboy and his mechanical bride: the sterile couple -- 28. Abortion as a means of building a utopian society ; Society as an art form -- 29. What contemporary culture commands people to prize ; The new Ten Commandments -- 30. How the abortion mentality logically and existentially leads to euthanasia ; Diary of an expectant mother".
- catalog description "VI. A strategy in review: a critical analysis of the pro-abortion strategy : 31. The pro-abortionists' mentality and the plot to kill Caesar -- Parallels in treachery -- 32. How to distinguish propaganda from dialogue when reviewing pro- and anti-abortion thinking -- Propaganda, dialogue, and abortion -- 33. Why the expression "Every child should be wanted" is more harmful than helpful, more illusory than enlightening -- Avoiding unwanted pregnancies and eliminating unwanted children through the magic of the slogan -- 34. The slogan begins where thinking leaves off -- slogans, sloganeers, and sloganeering -- 35. Five steps in the developing prejudice against the unborn -- a progress profile: from prejudice to genocide through violence -- 36. The misuse of words as a technique to obscure the reality of an abortion -- unidentified flying words".
- catalog description "VII. A twist of irony: incongruities in pro-abortion thinking : 37. How an illogical structure and a rhetorical content can 'prove' just about anything -- a radical liberal's nostrum for justifying just about anything -- 38. A new, flexible Hippocratic oath geared to satisfy everyone -- updating the Hippocratic oath -- 39. How the reasons for abortion may be extended to justify infanticide -- The society for a human continuance -- 40. The incongruity of a pro-abortion philosophy in the context of the sinking Titanic -- "A night to remember": a modernized fable -- 41. Can any of us be safe from the devastating implications of pro-abortion thinking? A brief report concerning life on the blue planet -- 42. The pro-abortion liberationist absurdity of trying to out-do God: liberation.".
- catalog extent "xiv, 194 p.".
- catalog hasFormat "Abortion in perspective.".
- catalog isFormatOf "Abortion in perspective.".
- catalog issued "1974".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Cincinnati, Ohio Hiltz and Hayes Publishing Co.".
- catalog relation "Abortion in perspective.".
- catalog subject "Abortion".
- catalog subject "Abortion, Induced Popular Works.".
- catalog subject "HQ 767 D372a 1974".
- catalog subject "HQ767 .D43".
- catalog subject "Medical ethics.".
- catalog tableOfContents "I. The force of philosophy : 1. What is the role of philosophy in the abortion debate? The relevance of philosophy -- 2. What are the philosophies behind the pro-abortion movement? The philosophical roots in western culture for the pro-abortion stand -- 3. The United States Supreme Court Ruling: Roe vs. Wade, January 22, 1973, Abortion reform: Democracy or authoritarianism? -- 4. Is the pro-abortionist the realist and the anti-abortionist the idealist? Abortion and the realist -- 5. Is modern man losing his reverence for life? Does wonder ever cease? -- 6. Should civil laws concerning abortion allow maximum leeway for the exercise of private conscience? Conscience and civil laws".
- catalog tableOfContents "II. Whose child is this? The nature of the foetus and the question of his rights : 7. What is the biological evidence? The merchants of Calumny -- 8. Along with the trees and the stars, does the foetus have a right to be here? The right to be born -- 9. What are the natural causes that bear upon the formation and development of the foetus and what moral implications do they carry? The foetus: his humanity and his rights -- 10. What are society's responsibilities to pregnant women and their developing unborn? Life and liberty: smoke and revolution -- 11. Why do some pro-abortionists feel that the foetus's being unwanted should override his being human? "All's right with the world" -- 12. Whose child is this? Does the foetus belong to his mother, his father, society, or himself? The answer lies in the form of a paradox: The polies of the paradox: Speakers for stereophonic thought".
- catalog tableOfContents "III. Restoring missing values: the real values that have been ignored, obscured, or misplaced in the attempt to justify abortion : 13. Care -- The primacy of care -- 14. Personal love -- Is mankind an object of love? -- 15. Faith and the moral imagination -- Rape and abortion: the loss of faith; the death of the moral imagination -- 16. The right to one's future -- Time on my hands -- 17. The acceptance of natural human limitation -- Freedom as a one-eyed Jack -- 18. Involvement with one's neighbor -- The bland Samaritan".
- catalog tableOfContents "IV. Glimpses of the transcendent: The transcendent implications of conception, pregnancy, and birth : 19. The union, peace, beginning, and hope represented by pregnancy -- Pregnancy: the peace movement without peer -- 20. Is abortion chosen for love or pity for the unborn? Abortion: love or pity? -- 21. Legal abortion includes the legality of putting an end to the human race -- Humanicide as a viable alternative -- 22. The logical and symbolic involvement of Christ in every act of abortion -- Abortion, Christianity, decide -- 23. "The birth of children is the death of parents" -- Birth and death: the rose palace and the fiery dragon -- 24. The woman's fear of not having control over her own body -- Me and my shadow".
- catalog tableOfContents "V. The climate of culture: the climate of contemporary culture which has helped to breed and foster the pro-abortion mentality : 25. Is contemporary culture replacing the need to love with the desire for affluence? Modern fastidiousness: has it made love obsolete? -- 26. Are there any compelling or even legitimate reasons left to have a baby? Why have a baby, anyway? -- 27. Is the foetus merely a population statistic? The playboy and his mechanical bride: the sterile couple -- 28. Abortion as a means of building a utopian society ; Society as an art form -- 29. What contemporary culture commands people to prize ; The new Ten Commandments -- 30. How the abortion mentality logically and existentially leads to euthanasia ; Diary of an expectant mother".
- catalog tableOfContents "VI. A strategy in review: a critical analysis of the pro-abortion strategy : 31. The pro-abortionists' mentality and the plot to kill Caesar -- Parallels in treachery -- 32. How to distinguish propaganda from dialogue when reviewing pro- and anti-abortion thinking -- Propaganda, dialogue, and abortion -- 33. Why the expression "Every child should be wanted" is more harmful than helpful, more illusory than enlightening -- Avoiding unwanted pregnancies and eliminating unwanted children through the magic of the slogan -- 34. The slogan begins where thinking leaves off -- slogans, sloganeers, and sloganeering -- 35. Five steps in the developing prejudice against the unborn -- a progress profile: from prejudice to genocide through violence -- 36. The misuse of words as a technique to obscure the reality of an abortion -- unidentified flying words".
- catalog tableOfContents "VII. A twist of irony: incongruities in pro-abortion thinking : 37. How an illogical structure and a rhetorical content can 'prove' just about anything -- a radical liberal's nostrum for justifying just about anything -- 38. A new, flexible Hippocratic oath geared to satisfy everyone -- updating the Hippocratic oath -- 39. How the reasons for abortion may be extended to justify infanticide -- The society for a human continuance -- 40. The incongruity of a pro-abortion philosophy in the context of the sinking Titanic -- "A night to remember": a modernized fable -- 41. Can any of us be safe from the devastating implications of pro-abortion thinking? A brief report concerning life on the blue planet -- 42. The pro-abortion liberationist absurdity of trying to out-do God: liberation.".
- catalog title "Abortion in Perspective The Rose Palace or the Fiery Dragon [by] Donald DeMarco, Foreward by Marshall McLuhan, Illustrated by William Kurelek".
- catalog type "text".