Squeenie said:
And I find it disturbing that you're dismissing the life of the mother here.
I'm not dismissing the life of the mother by any sane stretch of the imagination. My personal belief on abortion centres around the idea that the life of the mother and child are equivilent, and that it is not in the place of other humans to decide which lives and which dies without reasonable probability of survival in one case. Don't twist my words.
As for consciousness, that opens up a whole range of other issues. Do we just kill "vegetables", and if so, is it moral? My answer to both would be no, and for the reasons already stated.
Kwayera said:
At the current legal age up to abortion in most (if not all) countries where it is legal - only before 24 weeks - the baby does not know. You are obfuscating a living, thinking being with a being who by definition cannot yet think and feel.
No, I'm just not making a distinction based on consciousness or otherwise.
...and so you do the very thing that you have said you couldn't; chosen one life over another, even if only by inaction.
I've chosen to allow one to live over the other, but I personally haven't given preference because I see both as equal.
A female who has successfully given birth has proved herself fit enough to
- continue surviving long enough to
- breed again.
And of the fertile time left?
That's counting chickens before they hatch. Productively (and yes, this is biology, and it's cold - live with it), the adult female is worth more than the baby, because she has survived to sexual maturity and already proven her ability to breed. Her child has not, and (in the case of other animals) may not even survive childhood long enough to breed.
I don't want to pass judgement on this before I see statistics or something showing that actual productivity (chances of producing offspring) in a healthy, once pregnant adult female compared to a baby still to develop. In poorer countries the balance would be tipped towards the mother, but in Australia I'd believe it's a lot closer (actually, I'd believe that it'd swing the other way).
Not really, no. We interfere with other species' reproductive processes all the time.
And do I agree with this, or put humans on the same level as other species?
You would give a blastocyst full human rights status? It is a ball of cells. And up to ~24 weeks (giving a bit of wiggle room), the foetus can neither think nor feel. How judge you that it is afforded more rights than a person who can?
I give them that status because I see no other fair and solid boundary to put in place.
I would in the latter, but not in the former. It is an important distinction to make for our species, amongst others - sex is not primarily for reproduction. The social bonds formed during sex can increase an individual's Darwinian fitness, but not directly.
The social bonds/mate selection process is there, I don't doubt it, but I'd think that the overall purpose of sex is to make babies. Like um, a gun. The majority of gun shootings are at targets, but the purpose of a gun is not to shoot targets, it's to incapacitate or stop living things. Guns are made for that purpose, although they're used more often (overwhelmingly more often) in other circumstances. Poor analogy but it's the best one I could come up with.
You said earlier that intent didn't matter. Through no fault of her own, a woman can spontaneously abort a foetus, even a viable one. Is that still murder?
Nope, because by murder I'm talking predmeditated or conscious killing. I probably shouldn't be using the word 'murder' since that implies illegality, but you get what I mean.