G
Gorgias
Guest
Yes: GodHeals asked whether the ‘insane knife-wielding aggressor’ argument could be used in the case of an abortion doctor (if he thought he wasn’t doing anything wrong), and it was answered “possibly”. I disagreed with that assessment, since the reason that an ‘insane knife-wielding aggressor’ isn’t considered culpable is only that he’s incapable of making a moral judgment. We’re operating under the assumption that the doctor is capable of making a moral judgment, and therefore, this consideration cannot be utilized.Perhaps I misunderstand your point. I don’t understand the relevance of the insane doctor. Are you addressing a different question?
This is where you and I differ in our understanding of the issue. The insane attacker is guilty, but not culpable. The fetus is neither guilty nor culpable. The fetus is not a threat, per se. In Aristotelian terms, the insane attacker is the efficient cause of the defender’s threat: it’s his knife-wielding attack that threatens the defender. The fetus, on the other hand, is not the efficient cause of the mother’s illness: rather, an abnormality in the pregnancy or in the mother is the efficient cause. What’s inaccurate about your spin on the situation is that you’re killing the baby in order to remove the pathology, and attempting to equate that to an action against an attacker. The baby isn’t attacking his mother, which is why it’s not the same example, and can’t be used to support the logic you’re imposing on the situation.The insane attacker wasn’t introduced to parallel the doctor, but to parallel the fetus. Both are innocent - free of evil intent. Both are threats to innocent life. Both are killed.