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Dryden77
Guest
Your church does not teach that a person may use deadly force only in “life threatening” situations. Catholicism teaches that deadly force may be used (for example) even against a thief. (“It is lawful to defend one’s material goods even at the expense of the aggressor’s life; for neither justice nor charity require that one should sacrifice possessions, even though they be of less value than human life in order to preserve the life of a man who wantonly exposes it in order to do an injustice.”) newadvent.org/cathen/13691a.htmSee below for a response to self defense. As far as bodily integrity goes, I cannot believe you cited New Advent, which completely contradicts what you are trying to prove. A pregnancy is not life threatening, and just because someone bumps into you over even pushes you, you cannot respond with deadly force, that too is an infraction against bodily integrity. In fact the very sentence after the one you quote says: “It must be observed however that no more injury may be inflicted on the assailant than is necessary to defeat his purpose.” So what is the fetus’ purpose in invading ones bodily integrity? You have not listed what makes someone an aggressor, and how those attributes apply to a fetus, (either a fetus conceived during rape or any other method).
- You science is off. Once conception occurs, the sperm, that participated in the conception, is no longer present, and neither is the egg. So via your logic (with the correct science), the aggressor (even the unintentional aggressor) is gone, in its place in something new. You have not proven that this new entity, the fetus, is an aggressor (even an innocent one), you merely assert. What distinguishes this fetus with any other fetus, how come they both cannot be considered aggressors? Since fetuses are generally the same, what makes this fetus (not the sperm) an aggressor? Is it the fetus’s DNA, or its wantedness, since those are the only things that are really different between fetuses of the same gestational age.
Just so we don’t get confused here: I’m not suggesting that the fetus is a thief. Please let’s not belabor this. My aim in quoting New Advent is only to establish the Catholic principle that a person may, with no sin, and in certain circumstances, deliberately kill a person who poses no threat whatsoever to his life. If we don’t understand this we can’t proceed.
Bodily integrity, as your church defines and values it, is even more defensible than property. Bodily integrity means that one’s body is (and ought to be) free of foreign invaders (especially including appendages of human beings). Your church says that one is entitled to use deadly force to repel foreign invaders even for short periods of time. Nothing remotely approaching a life-threatening situation is needed to justify deadly force when bodily integrity is threatened.
You wanted to know what makes the fetus in our scenario so special. (“What distinguishes this fetus with any other fetus…?”) Glad you asked. This fetus is special because it doesn’t belong to the woman it inhabits. The woman who carries it is not its mother, nor is she its willing surrogate mother. You seem preoccupied with the process of sperm being absorbed into egg and then both sperm and egg dissolving into a fetus. This preoccupation of yours has nothing to do with our special scenario. In our scenario it is an actual fetus, conceived in-vitro, and not with the woman’s egg, that invades the woman’s uterus (through the mediation of an evil surgeon). The fetus in our scenario is a foreign invader from the very moment of intrusion because a) it enters the woman’s body without her permission (she’s been kidnapped and impregnated against her will) and b) it is not an offspring of the woman it inhabits. In no sense is it NOT a foreign invader. Ours isn’t a normal rape-pregnancy scenario – it isn’t a case of a rapist’s sperm entering a woman’s body and merging with her own egg to become an innocent non-invading fetus. This is a case of somebody else’s fetus being forced into the woman’s body. Not sure how to make this point more clearly.
Finally, you suggest that a malicious “purpose” is needed on the part of the fetus to justify killing it. Problem is, a “purpose” in an assailant isn’t necessarily a literal requirement for the use of deadly force. Your church is being both literal and figurative in using the word “purpose”: literal in the cases of those whose reason is intact and who are exercising their free will, and figurative in the cases of those whose minds are incapable of morally responsible determination (because their minds are damaged, drugged, diseased, controlled, or imperfectly developed) but whose behavior – or even mere presence – constitutes an act of aggression in and of itself.
The bottom line to all of this is that in the very special, but by no means impossible, scenario I asked us to consider, the Church’s teachings on self-defense contradict its absolute ban on abortion. The Church doesn’t ban the deliberate killing of malice-free adults, or adolescents, or even children – just fetuses. And that includes fetuses that aren’t even ours.