R
Reverie
Guest
I think that your example of providing an abortion for a maternal emergency does not fall under the doctrine of double effect because an abortion would be the direct killing of the unborn life. If a hysterectomy were provided in a maternal emergency, that would be double effect.I’m not suggesting that abortion is best described as a ‘cure’. What I’m suggesting is that the Doctrine of Double effect provides a justification, at least in some cases, to undertake an abortion in order to save the life of a mother. I’m interested to hear why you think it does not…
I don’t believe abortion is justified in any case.I think your slippery slope argument fails. Just because you believe abortion is justified in one case doesn’t mean you must accept that it is justified in another. If you believe that allowing abortion in some cases that are justified is still wrong because it will ‘open the floodgates’ and allow abortion in cases that are unjustified, then you are using the argument of a consequentialist, not a deontologist.