You yourself have explained your positions (duh) and know them more clearly than anyone, so I don’t know why I have to repeat them for you.
It’s called clarification and is a communication strategy used to be sure that both sides of the discussion have the same understanding of the issue at hand. I am not convinced that you and I have the same understanding of what you describe as “my positions,” so I asked for clarification. If you feel unable to articulate my positions adequately, so be it.
**Your position that abortion is permitable according to Catholic theology is wrong. The Catechism states that very clearly. **
Case in point. This is not my position. I did not say that “abortion is permittable by the Catholic Church.” I said that claiming that using medication to end a tubal pregnancy rather than using surgical methods to end that tubal pregnancy is the same as the willful abortion of a potentially viable child, therefore causing the woman to go through potentially unnecessary surgery rather than take an available, more conservative medical approach when possible is not logical and is not consistent with the teachings I have read about the importance of doing everything possible to preserve one’s fertility and openness to life if such medical options are available.
If it is not permissible for a woman to have a total hysterectomy if there are other, more conservative and effective means of treatment for a condition that will preserve her fertility, why would the more conservative medical approach not apply in this situation where the purpose is not contraception?
ethics.iit.edu/codes/coe/us.catholic.conference.1.html
"Procedures that induce sterility, whether permanent or temporary, are permitted when: a. They are immediately directed to the cure, diminution, or prevention of a serious pathological condition and are not directly contraceptive (that is, contraception is not the purpose); and b.
a simpler treatment is not reasonably available."
My actual position on this matter is that to end such a pregnancy is not and should not be considered an abortion in the same terms as those considered impermissible by the Catholic Church, any more than the Church teaches that for a soldier to kill an enemy combatant in the course of a “just war” is the same as going up to someone on the street and murdering them in cold blood. If you are willing to recognize that circumstances do indeed influence the morality of an action and make one exception to “killing is always immoral” then it seems illogical not to recognize that there are others.
As for semantics, I usually am pretty straight forward and say what I mean. Let me try in as bald a language as I can.
There is not a moral difference between using medication to kill a child in a tubal pregnancy and using surgery to remove the tube along with the child and also kill the child as it is not a question of morals in this circumstance, but a question of medical necessity and doing the least harm possible. The child ends up just as dead in either circumstance. Only if there were some even slightly reasonable option that might possibly perserve the life of the child until it could come to live birth, even if that was on the barest edge of viability, can I see that the issue of whether it is moral or immoral to kill the child comes into play. Otherwise, I consider it false morality even within the teachings of the Church to forbid a woman and her physician from using a method to end the pregnancy (kill the child) in the way that they deem most medically sound and therefore subjecting her to risk of more harm than is absolutely necessary.
If at some point in the future it does become possible to take some action that will not automatically end the life of the child does morality of the action come into play. I do not deny that the child is a human life and that the necessity of ending it is not a tragic one and one that should be mourned. I am neither advocating nor suggesting that doctors and women gleefully sit around rubbing their hands in anticipation of the joy of getting to use medicine because that’s the more fun way to kill a baby rather than surgery or that women are doing this to simply avoid being pregnant. An ectopic pregnancy is not a choice, it is an occurrence, a tragic, unfortunate one.
In what way am I marginalizing Catholics by expecting them to act with logic and internal consistency based on their stated positions and the state of human scientific and medical knowledge?