You cannot see the difference between a doctor’s performing an abortion and killing the child and a doctor’s performing chemotherapy on someone and as a side-effect killing a child?
- You are contradicting yourself when you say that the life of the unborn child is “no less precious” than the mother’s when you turn around and say that the child can be deliberately killed. Obviously in your opinion the child’s life is much less precious than hers.
- There is a difference both morally and legally between killing someone who is pursuing you to kill you and killing someone who will only potentially kill you. Can you understand that difference?
And there is an additional difference between someone who is intentionally out to kill you and a person who is doing nothing at all wrt to killing you
- And as I posted before in answer to you, there are no circumstances in which an abortion is medically necessary. There may be times when treating the mother will result in the death of her unborn child, but the death of the child was not the intent of the action, and treating the woman under these circumstances is not immoral. However, taking an action the only purpose of which is to kill the child is immoral.
- A woman who is 4 months pregnant has only a few weeks before her baby reaches the age at which children have been born and survived. If she is not in immediate danger, she needs no treatment. Should she become endangered by the pregnancy, she can then *be treated * and have a c-section; the point is that to pre-emptively kill the baby to avoid the *possible *harm to her health is immoral.
- You call the baby only a “potential life,” how does that work for you? Is the baby not yet alive? Is the baby not yet human? Is the baby not yet individual?
As I understand it, the laws of Judaism and the Torah on this subject were made centuries ago, when medical knowledge had not advanced to our current point. Serious Jewish literature on the point, such as the Mishna, indicates that the rules were made before knowledge of c-sections. Now, I can understand that when medical knowledge was low that people were been able to think to this position, not having the scientific understanding of what was happening during pregnancy and the medical capacities that we have now, but given that so much more can be done when a woman is in a high-risk pregnancy and so much more is known about pregnancy, that position is really unacceptable, *especially *considering that the life of the mother is never in the same kind of danger that once existed.
Which may be why Orthodox Jews tend to be pro-life.