Instructions: Read,  Kass, “Ageless Bodies, Happy Souls” and answer the followin

Instructions:
Read,  Kass, “Ageless Bodies, Happy Souls” and answer the followin

Instructions:
Read,  Kass, “Ageless Bodies, Happy Souls” and answer the following questions:
1. How does Kass call into question the distinction between therapy and enhancement?
2. What sorts of things stimulate “repugnance” in Kass’ account? Is Kass right to identify a sort of wisdom in this sort of repugnance?
3. Why does Kass celebrate humility and modesty in the face of “givenness” of life and acceptance of our aging bodies?
4. How convincing are each of these contentions made by deep ecologists: that our environmental problems are caused by our being too individualistic; that our environmental problems are caused by our reductionism; that our environmental problems are caused by our consumerism?
5.Do you think that it is morally permissible to use animals in experiments? If so, are there any conditions you would set on the experiments with regard to the type of animal used, the purpose of the experiments, or how to conduct the experiments?

Please read Thinking Critically About Ethical Issues, Case 1, p.61. Identify the

Please read Thinking Critically About Ethical Issues, Case 1, p.61. Identify the

Please read Thinking Critically About Ethical Issues, Case 1, p.61. Identify the moral issue(s) and the parties involved. Discuss the moral issues you have identified in terms of two of the following: Utility, duties, rights. 
Your analysis should be approximately 500 words in length and all sources should be cited using proper MLA format. 
Please use Burnor, Richard. Ethical Choices. Available from: Yuzu Reader, (3rd Edition). Oxford University Press Academic US, 2021. For any additional reference.
Case 1. The Makah tribe claim to have hunted gray whales for more than 2,000 years. They stopped in the 1920s due to a decline in the number of gray whales. Now they want to return to the hunt to provide food for their tribe and to restore the young men’s sense of discipline and pride in their traditions. Pro-ponents of the hunt claim that a majority of the tribe support the hunt, which is expected to take fewer than the five whales they are permitted by law to kill. Tribal leaders claim they will take no pregnant or nursing females. Some Makah elders disagree, however, pointing out that the tribe survived for most of the twentieth century without eating whale meat and claiming that there are better ways to instill pride and discipline. The environmental community argues that the whale hunt is immoral because it violates the whales’ right to exist on the planet. Is it appropriate for nonmembers of the Makah tribe—for example, students in your class—to evaluate the morality of the Makah whale hunt? Explain.
Ruggiero, Vincent. Thinking Critically About Ethical Issues. Available from: Yuzu Reader, (10th Edition). McGraw-Hill Higher Education (US), 2019.

Please watch these 3 videos. Then 1) briefly summarize each video Then 2) Addres

Please watch these 3 videos. Then 1) briefly summarize each video Then 2) Addres

Please watch these 3 videos. Then 1) briefly summarize each video Then 2) Address the following questions : ( Please use ALL THREE videos to answer these questions) : a) Demonstrate the importance of awareness and sensitivity when applying the AAMFT Code of Ethics in the multicultural context. b) Describe the importance of law and ethics to the practice of MFT in the recovery oriented public mental health service systems and integrative care systems. c) Discuss the future of MFT as a profession. Links to each video :
video 1 ) https://studio.youtube.com/video/cncZo1LjXIw/edit
Video 2 )https://studio.youtube.com/video/2BbImVR7Jl8/edit
Video 3) https://studio.youtube.com/video/oULhAFN5FhU/edit
Pease include references in APS format as well. Thank you

1.How convincing are each of these contentions made by deep ecologists: that ou

1.How convincing are each of these contentions made by deep ecologists: that ou

1.How convincing are each of these contentions made by deep ecologists: that our environmental problems are caused by our being too individualistic; that our environmental problems are caused by our reductionism; that our environmental problems are caused by our consumerism?
2.Do you think that it is morally permissible to use animals in experiments? If so, are there any conditions you would set on the experiments with regard to the type of animal used, the purpose of the experiments, or how to conduct the experiments?
Read  Guha, “Radical American Environmentalism and Wilderness Preservation: A Third World Critique” and answer the following question:
1. Why does Guha think the emphasis on wilderness preservation is harmful?
2. What problem does he have with the invocation of Eastern Religion?
3. How does he believe that elements of deep ecology favor the rich and urban elite in the third world?

Read  Regan, “The Case for Animal Rights” and answer the following questions:
1. What is the basic similarity between human and nonhuman beings that is the focus of Reagan’s account?
2. How does Reagan understand the inherent value of nonhuman animals?
3. How does his view of the equality of inherent value lead to an abolitionist conclusion with regard to animal experimentation and commercial animal agriculture?