Sentences with phrase «on begetting children»

For millennia every human culture has recognized the bond linking sex, marriage, and the generation of human life, and frowned on begetting children out of wedlock.

Not exact matches

Fertility doctors foresee an explosion in sex - selection procedures on the horizon, as couples become accustomed to the idea that they can pay to beget children of the gender they prefer.
[19] Barfield makes the distinction between Allegory, the hypostatisation (ascribing material existence to) of ideas, and myth; «the true child of Meaning, begotten on imagination.»
For we've already been told that the law must be settled on grounds that are «categorical»: it is not enough to say that marriages between men and women have the best chance of begetting children.
Just as violence begets violence, so angry parents tend to result in angry children, and parents who ridicule tend to produce sarcastic children, and critical parents tend to generate negative children, and on and on.
«For 80 percent of the human genome to be functional, each couple in the world would have to beget on average 15 children and all but two would have to die or fail to reproduce,» he wrote.
On the first issue the court said that «while the inability to beget a child might be a consequence of imprisonment, it is not an inevitable one, it not being suggested that the grant of artificial insemination facilities would involve any security issues or impose any significant administrative or financial demands on the state» — particularly since the couple would be paying privately for the facilitOn the first issue the court said that «while the inability to beget a child might be a consequence of imprisonment, it is not an inevitable one, it not being suggested that the grant of artificial insemination facilities would involve any security issues or impose any significant administrative or financial demands on the state» — particularly since the couple would be paying privately for the faciliton the state» — particularly since the couple would be paying privately for the facility.
The UK government first relied on the suggestion that losing the opportunity to beget children was an inevitable and necessary consequence of imprisonment.
The court ruled that while the inability to beget a child might be a consequence of imprisonment, it was not an inevitable one, it not being suggested that the grant of artificial insemination facilities would involve any security issues or impose any significant administrative or financial demands on the state.
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