martino:
You are correct for the first time in this discussion!!
Ummm, thank you for noticing!
Either neither one of us is speaking effectively or neither of us is listening to what the other is saying.
Maybe it’s also lost as I scramble to chase my own uncertainty amidst verbage. (I learned a new trick recently – I now like to take blame because that gives hope I can do something to correct the situation.)
We do agree on the premises it would seem, so it’s just the final good/bad conclusion at stake. Out of the first section of your post, here is probably the most telling snippets that might explain our differences here.
take a life (innocent life that is) to save a life!
I do not view it as taking a life in this scenario. I view it more like burying the dead.
The only objection I can see to that view, is the temporal control we have over the moment of death. To that I counter, if that is the distinguishing characteristic, then it is no more or less present with the tube removal.
as long as the death of the baby was not the direct result of the procedure…the baby’s death would be an unwanted side effect.
Frankly this reminds me of the ostrich effect. We know it will happen by our hands, so I’d say it’s a pretty direct result. Even if it were a secondary result, it is inevitable and the baby suffers no greater harm.
If we are not arguing in favor of whether one does less harm to the baby, then to whom are we showing kindness by bringing about its demise by a Rube-Goldberg sort of setup or Domino effect. It’s as if we know we must kill it but we are afraid to touch it while doing so.
The end NEVER justifies the means.
True statement, and I can agree with it. It is not relevant to the discussion of WHETHER they are evil.
because abortion by definition is the direct and intentional killing of the unborn baby. {bold added by Alan}
I think this is the big one; the biggest stumbling block between our views.
A doctor, a woman, and a baby go into a room. The baby does not come out alive. In one case the woman and doctor also come out with their reproductive organs about as intact as they were upon entry. In the other case the woman’s reproductive organs are irreparably damaged.
Those are the facts, as I think we agreed, with a bit of repackaging for emphasis to my point.
Now, given the reality of the events that just happened, I maintain that to judge them purely on the basis I just presented them, it would appear more real, physical harm has been done by the tubal. I don’t think that can be denied (assuming the medical facts are right, yada yada).
Now, in judging the two alternatives, you apply the definition of the word “abortion” as somehow relevant, and I don’t think the reality of the situation in terms of which one is more damaging is altered because of the way we apply terminology to what it is we are doing.
Either that, or one must conclude that ones ostensible intentions are more significant than actual damage. That is why I’m claiming symbolism over substance. Symbolism (definition of words) over substance (greater harm done in the name of obedience to God).
Actually, i think our biggest problem can be summed up with one 2-word phrase that i just used…Direct Killing.
To that I offer:
Indirect killing is still killing, but I’m OK with that when that is what one is morally obligated to do.
Alan
PS thank you for being patient. I think we’re getting somewhere now.