Disability Movement and Inner Eugenic Thought: A Philosophical Aspect of Independent Living and Bioethics

Eubios Journal of Asian and International Bioethics 12 (3):94-96 (2002)
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Abstract

The Japanese disability movement in the 1970s posed an important question about our inner eugenic thought. Their arguments should be one of the focuses of attention for bioethics and philosophy of life in the 21st century. Their philosophy is comparable with DPI’s declaration, “The Right to Live and be Different,” published in 2000. They thought that technology of selective abortion was dangerous because it systematically deprives us of a sense of security (=the fundamental sense of security) that our existence is being accepted unconditionally. They were considered to be seeking “life studies,” which has broader and deeper meanings than contemporary bioethics.

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Masahiro Morioka
Waseda University

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