A
anEvilAtheist
Guest
No. The difference is whether or not it is sentient. If it’s sentient then it deserves moral consideration. Even then though, it can sometimes be justified to kill a moral agent. For example, if a terrorist was trying to take over a plane and the only way to stop him was to kill him, it would be immoral not to do so. The violinist example raised earlier explains why abortion can sometimes be moral even if the fetus has reached the point of sentience.There seems to be some contradiction here. You’re a vegetarian because you want to avoid harming sentient life, yet you have no problem killing a child in utero. The only practicable difference is location, in the womb or out.
I think that’s right. It would seem absurd to me if someone valued the lives of a dozen ants above the life of a man. Do you disagree?So it does seem you see something wrong with stopping a biological process.
Humans are far more intelligent than any other species. By implication of your own admitted logic, it is unavoidable to conclude that it would be orders of magnitude more immoral to kill a human because it thinks and feels at a much more exquisite level than other animals.
Which is?This all speaks to a very solid secular argument against abortion.
There is a clear line of demarcation, but the question is whether that is the morally relevant one. With pay, you could say that the clear line of demarcation would be paying them nothing versus paying them something, but we would all agree that paying them a penny would be immoral.Two objections:
- Abortion is one of those moral issues where there is a perfectly clear line of demarcation, conception. We all know that a biological process known as an individual human life begins a fertilization.
I’m still unclear about what you mean by it being about the “fabric or morality” and how you think that is relevant for determining the immorality of abortion.But my objection is the fact that ANY moral dilemma you may devise is contingent on life. Any question about when something is or isn’t wrong presupposes living agents. Hence, abortion isn’t simply another run of the mill moral dilemma, but is actually about the fabric of morality itself.
- You’ve seemed to miss my earlier point. I fully grasp indeterminacy. At what point does a person officially become old? No clear cut off point.
I never limited it only to major religions. My assertion was that “For any immorality you can think of, there is almost certainly some religion that has believed it was perfectly fine.” There are or have been religions that believed that murder, rape, incest, or genocide were perfectly fine. In fact, some Christians believe that the genocides God ordered in the Old Testament were completely fine and that that the incest necessarily to get from one human couple to billions of humans was perfectly fine.To the contrary. Practically all major religions rely on the ethic of reciprocity. Insofar as religions vary from this, they vary from their foundation.
I never said that a desire utilitarian could not be anti-abortion. I just said that there are not good reasons for doing so. What desires would be thwarted if people did not have an aversion to early term abortion?You posited a good secular reason to oppose abortion, as I cited above, you simply don’t apply that reason consistently.
And there seems to be no reason that utilitarian can’t also be pro-life. If you desire to avoid all unnecessary pain, harm, or death to a sentient being, which I take it you do, then it is simply a matter of belief.
I don’t remember you naming specific desires that it would thwart. Why do you think it would thwart my desires?You don’t believe that abortion would thwart your desire. I would (and have) argued that your belief is false.
I agree that it is tangential to the argument at hand. I brought it up because someone had claimed that without God there could not be a basis for moral values. And just because both sides have arguments do not mean that they are good. I have done some reading of the philosophical literature on the topic and have yet to find an unproblematic version of divine command theory. If you want to read about some of the problems with divine command theory, I recommend checking out the work of Christian philosopher Wes Morriston who, despite being a believer, does not hesitate to point out the flaws in theist argument when he thinks they’re flawed. Here are two articles of his that are particularly relevant.This is all well worn and ultimately tangential to the topic at hand. Both sides marshal good arguments. But regardless of the base of morality, abortion is still immoral.