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- Newsgroups: talk.abortion
- Path: sparky!uunet!timbuk.cray.com!hemlock.cray.com!mon
- From: mon@cray.com (Muriel Nelson)
- Subject: Re: Pro-choicers must condone infanticide
- Message-ID: <1992Dec29.160413.11977@hemlock.cray.com>
- Lines: 138
- Nntp-Posting-Host: hemlock
- References: <1992Dec24.160149.23624@hemlock.cray.com> <1992Dec29.200040.23450@organpipe.uug.arizona.edu>
- Date: 29 Dec 92 16:04:13 CST
-
- In article <1992Dec29.200040.23450@organpipe.uug.arizona.edu> sfm@manduca.neurobio.arizona.edu (Stephen Matheson) writes:
- >From article <1992Dec24.160149.23624@hemlock.cray.com>,
- >by mon@cray.com (Muriel Nelson):
- >
- >> In article <1992Dec23.212832.10957@organpipe.uug.arizona.edu>
- >> sfm@manduca.neurobio.arizona.edu (Stephen Matheson) writes:
- >
- >>>From article <1992Dec23.104329.21553@hemlock.cray.com>,
- >>>by mon@cray.com (Muriel Nelson):
- >
- [exchange with Doug about 'moral weight' deleted.]
-
- >> [...] There have been several patient
- >> souls (I seem to remember Adrienne in particular) who have
- >> pointed out in the past week that as long as the fetus is
- >> _inside_ the woman, its presence and its prospective departure
- >> pose a nonzero risk of death for her.
- >
- >I fully acknowledge this fact, and I'm starting to regret entering
- >a discussion that is framed around what someone else (in this case
- >Doug H.) said. Nevertheless, I'd like to state that it was my
- >impression that the debate was centered on inherent moral differences
- >between a late-term fetus and an infant. If so, I question whether
- >the location of the fetus/infant and the danger it poses are really
- >inherent characteristics (in terms of morality) possessed by the
- >fetus/infant.
- >
- Careful. A woman's body is always _more_ than a mere
- 'location'. Since the very definition of 'fetus' hinges
- on a state of pregnancy for a woman, which is a profoundly
- altering physical condition, I maintain that it's a morally
- significant component of the fetus' existance.
-
- >Here's an example of what I'm thinking in this situation:
- >
- > A person is being held prisoner in a field. Another person arrives,
- > assesses the situation, considers the risks to his or her safety as
- > well as the risks to others in a nearby field, and decides to attempt
- > a rescue.
- >
- > Another person is being held in a fortified building. After careful
- > consideration, the would-be rescuer decides against a rescue attempt,
- > concluding that the risks involved do not justify the potential benefit
- > (i.e. saving the captive's life).
- >
- >I maintain that the difference between the 2 captives has nothing to
- >do with moral differences between them: they're both equally valuable
- >and equally worthy of consideration for being rescued. The difference
- >lies in the moral climate inherent in the situation. The lives of others
- >are considered equally, but separately.
- >
- Your analogy does nothing to simulate the reality of
- pregnancy and impending parturition. Equating the
- body of a living woman with any nonliving entity
- always falls short of the situation, and generally
- irritates the mothers in the group.
-
- >> Since Doug has doubtless read responses containing this
- >> precise point not once, but many times, his assertion
- >> boils down to just what I said above. Stated as an
- >> equation, it looks like this:
- >>
- >> woman = nothing
- >
- >He may have implied this elsewhere, and perhaps he implied it above.
- >Again, I thought the debate was centered on the fetus/infant and I
- >assumed that "factual differences" were much more narrowly applied
- >to the moral status of the f/i. I agree that a refusal to consider
- >the woman's moral status leads to the above equation.
-
- This is a key problem here. Many of us find it highly
- insulting, as well as misleading, to place the entire
- focus of the debate on the fetus. A very important
- component of the nature of a fetus is the condition it
- causes for a woman. To try to approach the moral issues
- of abortion in such a way that the woman is ignored or
- made to seem insignificant _is_ misogynic.
- >
- >>> He's talking about the existence of a
- >>>"moral difference between killing a newborn infant and killing
- >>>a late-term fetus." The interesting kernel of this debate is
- >>>the fact that some might conclude that there is no such moral
- >>>distinction, apart from the involvement of other persons. Perhaps
- >>>you'd be interested in addressing this.
- >
- >> If a full-term fetus is killed in utero, as part of a
- >> medical procedure, there is an _overwhelming_ liklihood
- >> that a woman's life is profoundly at risk at the time.
- >> If you can show documentation from an unbiased source
- >> that full-term fetuses are being killed in utero for
- >> trivial reasons, perhaps you'd have a point. I suspect
- >> that you have no such documentation, and therefore no point.
- >
- >You're right. But that wasn't my point. Note above:
- >"The interesting kernel of this debate..." and following.
- >Based on the responses I have seen, I was wrong about the
- >kernel of the debate.
-
- This is exciting. It's possible that some actual
- communication is taking place here!
-
- > I'm still curious about what folks
- >think about the inherent moral status of a late-term fetus,
-
- I don't think personhood occurs until birth, so I don't
- know what to say of the 'moral status' of a late-term fetus.
- I think the late-term fetus has tremendous _importance_,
- in the overwhelming majority of cases, to the woman, her
- loved ones, and her caregivers.
-
- >and I'm a sucker for a good, interesting discussion of personhood
- >and so forth. I DO NOT advocate any philosophy or legal
- >strategy that considers a fetus' (or a child's) rights to
- >the exclusion (or underemphasis) of another's.
- >
- Does this mean that you would not favor legislation
- restricting abortion? Because I maintain that it's
- impossible to give legal rights to a fetus without
- compromising the rights of women.
-
- [discussion of Doug's misogyny deleted]
- >
- >I've never seen it, but I don't read his posts much. I've been
- >around long enough to see a lot of pre-emptive strikes, and I've
- >been on the receiving end a couple of times. Since they tend
- >to discourage meaningful debate, I find them frustrating and
- >annoying. Since your comment does not fall into this category,
- >I must apologize. My fault.
- >
- Accepted.
- This was nicely done. There are few on this forum who
- can apologize gracefully when the situation calls for it.
-
- [deletia]
-
- muriel
- standard disclaimer
-
-