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If all else failed and a child came to be born, infanticide was always an option. Roman families would usually keep as many healthy sons as they had and only one daughter; the rest were simply discarded. In fact, the Twelve Tables, the earliest codification of Roman law, made it mandatory for the father to kill any visibly deformed child born into the family. This practice was considered essential to the health of the society and was supported by prominent thinkers
Why You Think the Way You Do: The Story of Western Worldviews from Rome to Home
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