Life and Learning VII – 1997
I. CONTEMPORARY CURRENTS
- Where is the Pro-Life Movement Today?
Mary Ellen Bork - Why Can’t We Love Them Both?
John and Barbara Willke - Adoption: Not an Easy Option
– and –
Adoption: A Personal Perspective
Teresa LaMonica
II. PHILOSOPHICAL AND THEOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES
- Coherence and Priority: Evaluating the Consistent Ethic
John J. Conley, S.J. - The Human Person Exists in Freedom Under the Truth
John F. Crosby - Absolute Autonomy and Physician-Assisted Suicide: Putting a Bad Idea Out of its Misery
Francis J. Beckwith - The Incompatibility of Contraception with Respect for Life
Kevin E. Miller
III. MEDICAL AND SCIENTIFIC PERSPECTIVES
- Mournful Numbers: Quantitative Tools for Combating the Overpopulation Myth
J. T. Maloy - Abortion, Breast Cancer, and Ideology
Joel Brind, M.D. - The “Morning-After Pill”: Another Step Towards Depersonalization?
Hanna Klaus, M.D.
IV. RELIGION AND SPIRITUALITY
- Catholic Retreat for Post-Abortion Women and Men: Results and Theological Reflections
William S. Kurz, S.J. - Faith, Suffering, and the Prolife Movement
Sidney Callahan
V. HISTORICAL AND LITERARY PERSPECTIVES
- Compulsory Sterilization, Euthanasia, and Propaganda: The Nazi Experience
Jay LaMonica - Abortion and the Nuremberg Prosecutors: A Deeper Analysis
John Hunt - Principles of American Life: An Archaeology of the Virus of Negation of Inalienable Rights and its Antidote in American Literature
Jeff Koloze - The Road to Roe: Cultural Change and the Growth of Acceptance of Abortion prior to 1973
Keith Cassidy