P
POJIUJH
Guest
I’m a little puzzled by this. Or rather, I am puzzled that a lot of us want to put this in different words. I want to get on good footing with regards to this (particularly living here in Ireland just outside Belfast) and when my sister had a threat of complication in her pregnancy, this really knocked me.
For instance, if a woman is surely going to die as a complication of pregnancy, and the child will surely die with her, why is it that the act of killing the child stops being immoral?
(If anyone has any knowledge in the area it would really like to hear the statistics of these occasions if anyone knows of any).
The only way I have heard it said differently is that the child is connected to X, and thus by removing X the child isn’t the target and thus is a side effect and not immoral.
Surely by that reasoning the same would apply if I were to remove the oxygen from the room my brother was in, and my brother suffocated as a consequence of the absence of oxygen, I would legitimately have an excuse for murder?
Is there a distinction I’m missing?
Any help is much appreciated,
Darran.
For instance, if a woman is surely going to die as a complication of pregnancy, and the child will surely die with her, why is it that the act of killing the child stops being immoral?
(If anyone has any knowledge in the area it would really like to hear the statistics of these occasions if anyone knows of any).
The only way I have heard it said differently is that the child is connected to X, and thus by removing X the child isn’t the target and thus is a side effect and not immoral.
Surely by that reasoning the same would apply if I were to remove the oxygen from the room my brother was in, and my brother suffocated as a consequence of the absence of oxygen, I would legitimately have an excuse for murder?
Is there a distinction I’m missing?
Any help is much appreciated,
Darran.