M
MilesVitae
Guest
I think I agree with you that the fact of them being fully grown (or not) is not relevant to the morality of the act.This is exactly what wanting to bring out. In fact I think the analogy works well. It is precisely the same situation, the first man is in the same position as the child, the second man is in the same position as the mother and will die unless the first man is killed. The only difference is that they are fully grown. Being autonomous most certainly doesn’t define your right to life, on the contrary we are morally obliged to protect those who aren’t. Being fully formed most certainly doesn’t define your right to life, and being separate people isn’t relevant since the child is separate, yet dependent on the mother.
What the analogy shows, just like what the Church teaches on euthanasia and abortion, is that the taking of any innocent life is gravely sinful.
Just think of it. Only in a situation where God intends two to die, would the devil ever tempt a person to save one, at the expense of killing the other. Satan has no problem sending a child to heaven provided he makes a murderer in the process.
I think some of the comments which have been made in this discussion are somewhat misleading. The critical criterion is not merely whether the death of the fetus or of the man with the healthy heart is immanent and certain.
The conditions of the principle of double effect are as follows.
- One must be engaging in an act which not intrinsically immoral.
- The negative effect(s) must not be a means to the good end.
- The negative effect must not be* intended*.
- The negative and positive effects must be proportionate.
- Directly killing an innocent person is immoral, always, period. Thus, to abort a child in the usual sense is immoral, always. This is different from when the death of the child is a consequence of some otherwise legitimate procedure on the woman. Regardless of the morality of the act, do you at least see the distinction between direct killing, and the death as a consequence?
- In the situations we are considering, the death of the child per se is not the means by which the woman is saved. It is the medical procedure which is the means to saving the mother - the mother’s life does not result from the child’s death. Rather, the mother’s life results from the medical procedure, AND the child’s death results from the medical procedure.
- The child’s death is not intended. It is foreseen, but this is not the same as it being intended. Do you see the distinction?
- The effects are proportionate. Although one life is lost, another is saved.
- He is not engaged in an intrinsically evil action.
- His death results from his action, but it is not a means to the good effect which he intends. The lives of those saved do not depend upon his death per se. They depend on an action which results in his death.
- His death is not intended, although he sees that it is certain to occur.
- the results are proportionate.