0 present participle of waive
1 to not demand something you have a right to, or not cause a rule to be obeyed:
In principle, the answer is yes, although two factors support waiving this responsibility and imposing more stringent duties on mere genetic contributors.
There are scant empirical data about whether parents and children support waiving the requirement for parental permission.
To avoid waiving permanently his claim to liberty, he must be kept alive.
But waiving this, clearly there is a difference between a set and a soul even though each is immaterial.
Compromise implies the settlement of differences by partial waiving of the principles.
Waiving any doubts about the stringency or scope of the duty of beneficence, there are three other problems to face if we are to make this argument work.
Brittan might argue that in this example workers would waive their rights, but if the right has the importance he ascribes to it, hypothetical waiving should not be enough.
Again, a distinction needs to be drawn between exercising the claim in one direction and thereby waiving its exercise in the opposite direction, and waiving the claim altogether.