Issue VIII,2: Table of Contents

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Articles
Right and wrong in biotechnology: what we don't know tells us what we can't do
Challenging the perhaps too-facile assumptions of pro-lifers, FUS alum John Henry Crosby asks whether belief in the personhood of the human embryo is fully justified philosophically. He then goes on to show that whether or not the embryo is a person, the real possibility of personhood is enough to put a strict moral prohibition on lethal embryonic research.
Liturgical reforms were valid, but defective
FUS senior Michael Houser grants that Vatican II was a great gift to the Church, but questions the wisdom of various aspects of the liturgical reforms that followed in its wake. He also humbly calls for, at minimum, a wider allowance for Tridentine Masses for those who prefer them.
The unfeasibility of the Social Credit solution
Ave Maria economics professor, Gabriel Martinez, criticizes Oliver Heydorn's proposed 'Social Credit' as a substitution for the fractional reserve banking system, without denying that that system is in need of serious reform.
Social Credit is no alternative
FUS professors Zoric and Welker, too, take Heydorn to task for an insufficient grasp of real world economics.
Short takes
Kudos to Heydorn, Thomas Storck


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