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I’m not sure if this was submitted yet, but basically I would like to ask a few questions: (1) Granted that it’s not true that the proposition “we should make abortion illegal” is just a prudential matter, could it be true that “we should make abortion illegal now and by this process” is? (2) The Catholic Encyclopedia defines a good custom as a law. If that is true, then can one make abortion “illegal” by decentralized means too?
I suppose that the answer to the first question is the answer to the general question of whether murder should be made illegal now. And it should be made illegal now, so the same holds true of abortion.
But I don’t think that deduction is true in every scenario. For instance, to publicly argue against abortion could make people even more obstinate in their pro-choice convictions. So the only way to get rid of abortion might be to emphasize doing other things so that eventually, abortion could be made illegal. Is this valid moral reasoning?
I suppose that the answer to the first question is the answer to the general question of whether murder should be made illegal now. And it should be made illegal now, so the same holds true of abortion.
But I don’t think that deduction is true in every scenario. For instance, to publicly argue against abortion could make people even more obstinate in their pro-choice convictions. So the only way to get rid of abortion might be to emphasize doing other things so that eventually, abortion could be made illegal. Is this valid moral reasoning?