What is your answer?
Which do the authors NOT hold to be true of abortion?
{ 1 } - Abortion of children in difficult cases encourages the widespread practice of abortion in much less justifiable cases.
{ 2 } - The family institution, which is basic to society, is further weakened when the values of parenthood and of the child as a gift of God are undermined by the spreading practice of abortion, which today is an important element in the decline of the family in the United States.
{ 3 } - Unmarried women, mentally retarded women, and victims of rape and incest deserve the protection and care of society, which is too likely to dispense itself from this obligation simply providing abortion as a solution.
{ 4 } - Easy abortion encourages in society and in individuals an attitude of low regard for the human person, as such, and favors a merely funtional evaluation of persons in terms of their actual, present contribution to economic productivity and subjective well-being.
{ 5 } - Abortion rightly reinforces the personhood of the woman who chooses it, since she is defined as an embodied intelligent freedom, and must be able to express this freedom in the right to choose what is good for her own body.
{ 6 } - With regard to abortion, women are encouraged and even forced by society to act in a way contradictory to their love and care for their own and others' children.
{ 7 } - By choosing to abort a child, a mother seeks to defend her own rights by destroying another human being, an action that is radically unjust to another and contrary to her own moral dignity as a person.
{ 8 } - Abortion policies tend to exclude the father from his proper responsibility for pregnancy and for the child and from his role of supporting his wife and sharing her burdens.
<= back | menu | forward =>
Directions: Click on a number from 1 to 8.
1 is wrong. Please try again.
Which do the authors NOT hold to be true of abortion?
{ 1 } - Abortion of children in difficult cases encourages the widespread practice of abortion in much less justifiable cases.
{ 2 } - The family institution, which is basic to society, is further weakened when the values of parenthood and of the child as a gift of God are undermined by the spreading practice of abortion, which today is an important element in the decline of the family in the United States.
{ 3 } - Unmarried women, mentally retarded women, and victims of rape and incest deserve the protection and care of society, which is too likely to dispense itself from this obligation simply providing abortion as a solution.
{ 4 } - Easy abortion encourages in society and in individuals an attitude of low regard for the human person, as such, and favors a merely funtional evaluation of persons in terms of their actual, present contribution to economic productivity and subjective well-being.
{ 5 } - Abortion rightly reinforces the personhood of the woman who chooses it, since she is defined as an embodied intelligent freedom, and must be able to express this freedom in the right to choose what is good for her own body.
{ 6 } - With regard to abortion, women are encouraged and even forced by society to act in a way contradictory to their love and care for their own and others' children.
{ 7 } - By choosing to abort a child, a mother seeks to defend her own rights by destroying another human being, an action that is radically unjust to another and contrary to her own moral dignity as a person.
{ 8 } - Abortion policies tend to exclude the father from his proper responsibility for pregnancy and for the child and from his role of supporting his wife and sharing her burdens.
See p. 260.
<= back | menu | forward =>
2 is wrong. Please try again.
Which do the authors NOT hold to be true of abortion?
{ 1 } - Abortion of children in difficult cases encourages the widespread practice of abortion in much less justifiable cases.
{ 2 } - The family institution, which is basic to society, is further weakened when the values of parenthood and of the child as a gift of God are undermined by the spreading practice of abortion, which today is an important element in the decline of the family in the United States.
{ 3 } - Unmarried women, mentally retarded women, and victims of rape and incest deserve the protection and care of society, which is too likely to dispense itself from this obligation simply providing abortion as a solution.
{ 4 } - Easy abortion encourages in society and in individuals an attitude of low regard for the human person, as such, and favors a merely funtional evaluation of persons in terms of their actual, present contribution to economic productivity and subjective well-being.
{ 5 } - Abortion rightly reinforces the personhood of the woman who chooses it, since she is defined as an embodied intelligent freedom, and must be able to express this freedom in the right to choose what is good for her own body.
{ 6 } - With regard to abortion, women are encouraged and even forced by society to act in a way contradictory to their love and care for their own and others' children.
{ 7 } - By choosing to abort a child, a mother seeks to defend her own rights by destroying another human being, an action that is radically unjust to another and contrary to her own moral dignity as a person.
{ 8 } - Abortion policies tend to exclude the father from his proper responsibility for pregnancy and for the child and from his role of supporting his wife and sharing her burdens.
See p. 260.
<= back | menu | forward =>
3 is wrong. Please try again.
Which do the authors NOT hold to be true of abortion?
{ 1 } - Abortion of children in difficult cases encourages the widespread practice of abortion in much less justifiable cases.
{ 2 } - The family institution, which is basic to society, is further weakened when the values of parenthood and of the child as a gift of God are undermined by the spreading practice of abortion, which today is an important element in the decline of the family in the United States.
{ 3 } - Unmarried women, mentally retarded women, and victims of rape and incest deserve the protection and care of society, which is too likely to dispense itself from this obligation simply providing abortion as a solution.
{ 4 } - Easy abortion encourages in society and in individuals an attitude of low regard for the human person, as such, and favors a merely funtional evaluation of persons in terms of their actual, present contribution to economic productivity and subjective well-being.
{ 5 } - Abortion rightly reinforces the personhood of the woman who chooses it, since she is defined as an embodied intelligent freedom, and must be able to express this freedom in the right to choose what is good for her own body.
{ 6 } - With regard to abortion, women are encouraged and even forced by society to act in a way contradictory to their love and care for their own and others' children.
{ 7 } - By choosing to abort a child, a mother seeks to defend her own rights by destroying another human being, an action that is radically unjust to another and contrary to her own moral dignity as a person.
{ 8 } - Abortion policies tend to exclude the father from his proper responsibility for pregnancy and for the child and from his role of supporting his wife and sharing her burdens.
See p. 260.
<= back | menu | forward =>
4 is wrong. Please try again.
Which do the authors NOT hold to be true of abortion?
{ 1 } - Abortion of children in difficult cases encourages the widespread practice of abortion in much less justifiable cases.
{ 2 } - The family institution, which is basic to society, is further weakened when the values of parenthood and of the child as a gift of God are undermined by the spreading practice of abortion, which today is an important element in the decline of the family in the United States.
{ 3 } - Unmarried women, mentally retarded women, and victims of rape and incest deserve the protection and care of society, which is too likely to dispense itself from this obligation simply providing abortion as a solution.
{ 4 } - Easy abortion encourages in society and in individuals an attitude of low regard for the human person, as such, and favors a merely funtional evaluation of persons in terms of their actual, present contribution to economic productivity and subjective well-being.
{ 5 } - Abortion rightly reinforces the personhood of the woman who chooses it, since she is defined as an embodied intelligent freedom, and must be able to express this freedom in the right to choose what is good for her own body.
{ 6 } - With regard to abortion, women are encouraged and even forced by society to act in a way contradictory to their love and care for their own and others' children.
{ 7 } - By choosing to abort a child, a mother seeks to defend her own rights by destroying another human being, an action that is radically unjust to another and contrary to her own moral dignity as a person.
{ 8 } - Abortion policies tend to exclude the father from his proper responsibility for pregnancy and for the child and from his role of supporting his wife and sharing her burdens.
See p. 261.
<= back | menu | forward =>
5 is correct!
Which do the authors NOT hold to be true of abortion?
{ 1 } - Abortion of children in difficult cases encourages the widespread practice of abortion in much less justifiable cases.
{ 2 } - The family institution, which is basic to society, is further weakened when the values of parenthood and of the child as a gift of God are undermined by the spreading practice of abortion, which today is an important element in the decline of the family in the United States.
{ 3 } - Unmarried women, mentally retarded women, and victims of rape and incest deserve the protection and care of society, which is too likely to dispense itself from this obligation simply providing abortion as a solution.
{ 4 } - Easy abortion encourages in society and in individuals an attitude of low regard for the human person, as such, and favors a merely funtional evaluation of persons in terms of their actual, present contribution to economic productivity and subjective well-being.
{ 5 } - Abortion rightly reinforces the personhood of the woman who chooses it, since she is defined as an embodied intelligent freedom, and must be able to express this freedom in the right to choose what is good for her own body.
{ 6 } - With regard to abortion, women are encouraged and even forced by society to act in a way contradictory to their love and care for their own and others' children.
{ 7 } - By choosing to abort a child, a mother seeks to defend her own rights by destroying another human being, an action that is radically unjust to another and contrary to her own moral dignity as a person.
{ 8 } - Abortion policies tend to exclude the father from his proper responsibility for pregnancy and for the child and from his role of supporting his wife and sharing her burdens.
Freedom implies a right to choose love, not what destroys love in oneself or another.
<= back | menu | forward =>
Before continuing, you might try some wrong answers.
6 is wrong. Please try again.
Which do the authors NOT hold to be true of abortion?
{ 1 } - Abortion of children in difficult cases encourages the widespread practice of abortion in much less justifiable cases.
{ 2 } - The family institution, which is basic to society, is further weakened when the values of parenthood and of the child as a gift of God are undermined by the spreading practice of abortion, which today is an important element in the decline of the family in the United States.
{ 3 } - Unmarried women, mentally retarded women, and victims of rape and incest deserve the protection and care of society, which is too likely to dispense itself from this obligation simply providing abortion as a solution.
{ 4 } - Easy abortion encourages in society and in individuals an attitude of low regard for the human person, as such, and favors a merely funtional evaluation of persons in terms of their actual, present contribution to economic productivity and subjective well-being.
{ 5 } - Abortion rightly reinforces the personhood of the woman who chooses it, since she is defined as an embodied intelligent freedom, and must be able to express this freedom in the right to choose what is good for her own body.
{ 6 } - With regard to abortion, women are encouraged and even forced by society to act in a way contradictory to their love and care for their own and others' children.
{ 7 } - By choosing to abort a child, a mother seeks to defend her own rights by destroying another human being, an action that is radically unjust to another and contrary to her own moral dignity as a person.
{ 8 } - Abortion policies tend to exclude the father from his proper responsibility for pregnancy and for the child and from his role of supporting his wife and sharing her burdens.
See p. 260.
<= back | menu | forward =>
7 is wrong. Please try again.
Which do the authors NOT hold to be true of abortion?
{ 1 } - Abortion of children in difficult cases encourages the widespread practice of abortion in much less justifiable cases.
{ 2 } - The family institution, which is basic to society, is further weakened when the values of parenthood and of the child as a gift of God are undermined by the spreading practice of abortion, which today is an important element in the decline of the family in the United States.
{ 3 } - Unmarried women, mentally retarded women, and victims of rape and incest deserve the protection and care of society, which is too likely to dispense itself from this obligation simply providing abortion as a solution.
{ 4 } - Easy abortion encourages in society and in individuals an attitude of low regard for the human person, as such, and favors a merely funtional evaluation of persons in terms of their actual, present contribution to economic productivity and subjective well-being.
{ 5 } - Abortion rightly reinforces the personhood of the woman who chooses it, since she is defined as an embodied intelligent freedom, and must be able to express this freedom in the right to choose what is good for her own body.
{ 6 } - With regard to abortion, women are encouraged and even forced by society to act in a way contradictory to their love and care for their own and others' children.
{ 7 } - By choosing to abort a child, a mother seeks to defend her own rights by destroying another human being, an action that is radically unjust to another and contrary to her own moral dignity as a person.
{ 8 } - Abortion policies tend to exclude the father from his proper responsibility for pregnancy and for the child and from his role of supporting his wife and sharing her burdens.
See p. 259.
<= back | menu | forward =>
8 is wrong. Please try again.
Which do the authors NOT hold to be true of abortion?
{ 1 } - Abortion of children in difficult cases encourages the widespread practice of abortion in much less justifiable cases.
{ 2 } - The family institution, which is basic to society, is further weakened when the values of parenthood and of the child as a gift of God are undermined by the spreading practice of abortion, which today is an important element in the decline of the family in the United States.
{ 3 } - Unmarried women, mentally retarded women, and victims of rape and incest deserve the protection and care of society, which is too likely to dispense itself from this obligation simply providing abortion as a solution.
{ 4 } - Easy abortion encourages in society and in individuals an attitude of low regard for the human person, as such, and favors a merely funtional evaluation of persons in terms of their actual, present contribution to economic productivity and subjective well-being.
{ 5 } - Abortion rightly reinforces the personhood of the woman who chooses it, since she is defined as an embodied intelligent freedom, and must be able to express this freedom in the right to choose what is good for her own body.
{ 6 } - With regard to abortion, women are encouraged and even forced by society to act in a way contradictory to their love and care for their own and others' children.
{ 7 } - By choosing to abort a child, a mother seeks to defend her own rights by destroying another human being, an action that is radically unjust to another and contrary to her own moral dignity as a person.
{ 8 } - Abortion policies tend to exclude the father from his proper responsibility for pregnancy and for the child and from his role of supporting his wife and sharing her burdens.
See p. 260.
<= back | menu | forward =>
the end