Kevin_Lowe
Unregistered
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2003
- Messages
- 12,221
I voted for "abortion is never wrong".
For starters, I don't attach any special value to life just because it's human life. You could flush a billion fertilised eggs, and as far as I'm concerned there would be absolutely nothing immoral doing so.
A one month old newborn is not as smart, nor as capable of understanding and enjoying life as a rat. Given time it might turn into a morally significant being, and I certainly would never cause even such a trivial entity pain if I could avoid it, but if it dies I don't really care. Potential is not actuality, acorns aren't oak trees, and newborns aren't human beings in the special, morally important sense.
(Newborns are emotionally important to their parents, of course, just as teddy bears are emotionally important to kids).
As far as I'm concerned that's enough to settle the argument but even if newborns or fetuses were as important as proper people, as JJ Thomson pointed out back in 1971, that wouldn't give them the right to access their mother's body without her consent for nine months. Implantation is not a contract, and any time the mother wants to serve the blob with eviction papers as far as I can see she has a perfect right to do so.
There have been various feeble efforts to cook up some reason to endow the mother with a moral obligation to nourish an unwanted, unintelligent parasite but they all boil down to pretending that blobby little things count as people with the same rights as adult women.
To sum up: Fetuses aren't important for their own sake, and even if they were it would still be the woman's right to ditch them whenever they wanted.
For starters, I don't attach any special value to life just because it's human life. You could flush a billion fertilised eggs, and as far as I'm concerned there would be absolutely nothing immoral doing so.
A one month old newborn is not as smart, nor as capable of understanding and enjoying life as a rat. Given time it might turn into a morally significant being, and I certainly would never cause even such a trivial entity pain if I could avoid it, but if it dies I don't really care. Potential is not actuality, acorns aren't oak trees, and newborns aren't human beings in the special, morally important sense.
(Newborns are emotionally important to their parents, of course, just as teddy bears are emotionally important to kids).
As far as I'm concerned that's enough to settle the argument but even if newborns or fetuses were as important as proper people, as JJ Thomson pointed out back in 1971, that wouldn't give them the right to access their mother's body without her consent for nine months. Implantation is not a contract, and any time the mother wants to serve the blob with eviction papers as far as I can see she has a perfect right to do so.
There have been various feeble efforts to cook up some reason to endow the mother with a moral obligation to nourish an unwanted, unintelligent parasite but they all boil down to pretending that blobby little things count as people with the same rights as adult women.
To sum up: Fetuses aren't important for their own sake, and even if they were it would still be the woman's right to ditch them whenever they wanted.