C
Corki
Guest
This analogy is easy to deflate:To help support her argument, the author of the article I read came up with this analogy, which sort of puts all of the theoretical material that I have outlined above on a more relateable level:
Suppose you find yourself one morning randomly hooked up to a famous violinist whose life depends on your kidneys purifying his blood along with your own. The doctor says to you, “It’s all most distressing, and I deeply sympathize, but you see this is putting an additional strain on your kidneys, and you’ll be dead within a month. But you have to stay where you are all the same. Because unplugging you would be directly killing an innocent violinist, and that’s murder, and that’s impermissible.”
So how would one respond to this one? Because the violinist is just as innocent as a baby would be.
- one does not “randomly” become pregnant (nor for that matter “ramdomly” hooked up to dying violinists
) - the situation of being “hooked up” to a violinist involved the criminal act of a third person (the doctor). no such act has occured in the situation of a woman with a life threatening pregnancy
- if the person who was hooked up to the violinist was to unhook him/her self, that *could *be a reasonable case of self defense against the doctor but not against the violinist.
- unless the violinist was also put into this situation against his/her will, he/she had a role to play in getting into this situation. He/she would have had to seek out the treatment and agree to have you hooked up to him/her. No such corallary with a baby.
- unplugging you from the violinist wouldn’t be directly killing him anyway.