Non-christians and even christians can
take opposite positions on abortion
even when they think rationally, honestly,
and with good will. The continuing
controversy over abortion shows that it is
a truly controversial issue. It is
not simple and clear-cut, but complex.
Just as the choices for action are
often difficult for a woman contemplating
abortion, the choices for thought
are often difficult for open-minded
philosophers.
Everything I have said so far is a lie, in
fact a dangerous lie.
There is one and only one reason why
people argue about the topic of this
paper, whether human personhood begins at
conception: because some people
want to justify abortion. Therefore I
begin with some remarks about abortion.
Abortion is a clear-cut evil. Anyone who
honestly seeks "peace on earth, good
will toward men" will see this if only he
extends it to include women and
children. Especially christians should
see this very clearly, for their faith
reinforces their natural reason and
conscience, a faith that declares that
every human being is sacred because he or
she is made in the image of god.
The fact that some people controvert a
position does not in itself make that
position intrinsically controversial.
People argued for both sides about
slavery, racism and genocide too, but that
did not make them complex and
difficult issues. Moral issues are always
terribly complex, said chesterton-
for someone without principles.
I think I have already offended every
reader who is not clearly pro-life, and
before I begin to argue my case I would
like briefly to examine that offense.
Though I shall appeal only to reason in
the body of my paper, I want to
appeal first to an attitude of will
because it is to the argument like a
frame to a picture. Our will often moves
our reason, for good or for ill.
"for ill" refers to rationalization, but
how can will move reason for good?
By the initial attitude of honesty, which
is a fanatical and uncompromising
love of truth, objective truth.
Objectivity does not mean abandoning or
weakening our convictions. An honest
conviction is one arrived at after an
open-minded search for truth; a
prejudice is one arrived at before.
Honesty leads to conviction, not away
from it.
I think we will have little hope of
attaining this goal of honesty unless we
first realize its difficulty and the
sacrifices of self-will it demands. The
most prejudiced people in the world are
those who think they are unprejudiced.
In my own thought life, I find this total
honesty to be very demanding, very
rare, and absolutely necessary.
Please turn to yourself for one moment and
ask yourself this one question:
am I reading this paper because I want to
be the servant of truth or because
i want truth to be my servant? Do I want
to win an argument or win a truth?
Am I willing, even eager, to admit I was
wrong if reason proves me wrong?
If freud is right, we have no hope of
being honest, for all our reasoning is
rationalization. If that were true, it
would be self-eliminating, for that
belief too would be only rationalization.
If we believe that objective truth
does not exist or cannot be known, we
shall cease to fight for it with words
and begin to fight for domination over
each other, replacing reason and
justice and morality with power-as is done
in abortion clinics to unborn
children.
It is not easy to argue about abortion
objectively. Our choice of words is
already prejudicial-as mine was just now,
but no more so than calling the
killing of a fetus "the termination of a
pregnancy." I wonder when they will
start calling it "the final solution to
the pregnancy problem"?
Our passions run hot about abortion. I
have repeatedly been told that I am
naive to argue against abortion
philosophically, not realizing that
abortion
is not so much about fetuses as about sex;
that those who demand to live
"the sexual revolution" (i.E.,
promiscuously) must have abortion as a
backup,
a trump card, when other means of birth
control fail. I have been told this
by both sides often enough that I begin to
believe it. After all, if we
obeyed the commandment against adultery,
90% of all our abortions would cease.
The issue I have been asked to argue, the
personhood of the fetus, is triply
crucial. It is crucial for abortion,
abortion is crucial for medical ethics,
and medical ethics is crucial for the
future of our civilization.
First, the personhood of the fetus is
clearly the crucial issue for abortion,
for if the fetus is not a person, abortion
is not the deliberate killing of
an innocent person: if it is, it is. All
other aspects of the abortion
controversy are relative to this one;
e.G., women have rights-over their own
bodies but not over other persons' bodies.
The law must respect a "right to
privacy" but killing other persons is not
a private but a public deed.
Persons have a "right to life" but
non-persons (e.G., cells, tissues,
organs,
and animals) do not.
Second, abortion is a crucial issue for
medical ethics because the right to
life is the fundamental right. If I am
not living I can have no other rights.
Corpses have no rights. The two sides on
this issue are more intransigently
opposed to each other than on any other
issue-rightly so, for if pro-lifers
are right, then abortion is homicide, and
if pro-choicers are right, then pro-
lifers are fanatic, intolerant and
repressive about nothing. We must
intolerantly kill both intolerance and
killing.
Third, medical ethics is crucial for our
civilization, for our lives are more
closely touched here than by any economic,
political, or military issue. For
instance, artificial immortality would
change mankind more radically than a
nuclear war, and surrogate motherhood,
which brings us to brave new world, is
a more radical development than
totalitarian dictatorship, which brings us
only to 1984.
Abortion is also crucial because it
involves at least six other crucial
background issues:
(1) are there objective values that
must be known and obeyed, or do we
create our own values like the rules of a
game?
(2) if there are objective values, are
any of them absolute or are all
relative to changing situations, motives,
needs, or desires?
(3) is human life such an absolute, or
"sacred," or does the "quality of
life" or level of ability to perform
certain human acts define the
value of a person?
(4) can human reason discern the truth
about moral values or not?
(curiously, christian fideists here line
up with anti-christian
skeptics and secularists against mainline
christian orthodoxy.)
(5) what is a human person? Are we
made in the image of king kong or king
god or both?
(6) why is a human person? What is
the purpose, goal, or "final cause" of
human life? This question is necessarily
involved because the end
determines the means.
(7) finally, abortion is defended most
stoutly by the new ideology of
radical feminism, which is more
fundamentally critical of traditional
values than any merely political ideology
even in our century. It
raises such radically new questions as
whether the idea of the
sanctity of unborn human life is part of
a dark patriarchal plot to
suppress and control women as
reproductive slaves.
All these issues are involved in abortion,
but I shall argue only one: is the
fetus a person? The case for pro-life's
affirmative answer is well-known, and
so are the biological facts which
constitute its simplest and strongest
evidence, especially the genetic identity
and individuality of the unborn
child from the moment of conception. How
does the pro-choice position argue
against this case?
To understand the controversy, we must
understand the general structure of
moral reasoning. A moral conclusion about
the goodness or evil of a human act
is deduced from two premises: a major
premise, which states a general moral
principle (e.G., "we ought to pay our
debts") and a minor premise, which sees
a particular situation as coming under
that principle (e.G., "international
debts are debts"). Thus the essential
pro-life argument is as follows. The
major premise is: "thou shalt not
kill"-i.E., all deliberate killing of
innocent human beings is forbidden. The
minor premise is that abortion is the
deliberate killing of innocent human
beings. The conclusion is that abortion
is wrong.
There are two significantly different
pro-choice answers to this argument.
The more radical, or "hard," pro-choice
position denies the major premise;
the less radical, or "soft," pro-choice
position denies the minor. "hard
pro-choice" denies the sanctity or
inviolability of all humans; "soft pro-
choice" denies the humanity of the
fetus.
I think no one in the christian medical
and dental society will take the hard
pro-choice position, for christianity
clearly teaches (1) that all of us are
made in the image of god and (2) that god
himself has forbidden us to kill,
i.E., to homicide innocent persons. I
confine myself, therefore, to refuting
the soft pro-choice position.
Is the fetus a person? Obviously it is
biologically human, genetically human,
a distinct member of the species homo
sapiens. So the soft pro-choicer must
distinguish between human beings and
persons, must say that fetuses are human
but not persons, and say that all persons,
but not all humans, are sacred and
inviolable.
Thus the crucial issue is: are there any
human beings who are not persons? If
so, killing them might be permissible,
like killing warts. But who might
these human non-persons be? Jews?
Blacks? Slaves? Infidels?
Counterrevolutionaries? Others have said
so, and justified their genocide,
lynching, slavery, jihad, or gulag. But
pro-choicers never include these
groups as non-persons. Many pro-choicers
include severely retarded or
handicapped humans, or very old and sick
humans, as non-persons, but this is
still morally shocking to most people, and
many pro-choicers avoid that
morally shocking position by including
only fetuses as members of this newly
invented class of human non-persons, or
non-personal humans. I think no one
ever conceived of this category before the
abortion controversy. It looks
very suspiciously like the category was
invented to justify the killing, for
its only members are the humans we happen
to be now killing and want to keep
killing and want to justify killing. But
the only way we can prove this dark
suspicion true is to refute the category.
Are there any humans who are not
persons?
Soft pro-choicers give reasons for
thinking there are. Their position can be
fairly summarized, I think, in seven
arguments. Each attacks a basic pro-life
syllogism by accusing it in different ways
of using an ambiguous middle term,
"human being." they say a fetus is a human
life but not a human person:
first, there is the linguistic fact that
we can and often do make a triple
distinction among a human life, a human
being and a human person. Each cell
in our bodies has human life, and a single
cell kept alive in a laboratory
could be called "a human life" but
certainly not "a human being" or "a human
person." "a human being" is a biologically
whole individual of the species.
Even a human being born with no brain is a
human being, not an ape; but it is
not a person because it has no brain and
cannot do anything distinctively
human: think, know, choose, love, feel,
desire, commit, relate, aspire, know
itself, know god, know its past, know its
future, know its environment, or
communicate-all of which have, in various
combinations, been offered as the
marks of a person. The pro-life position
seems to confuse the sanctity of the
person with the sanctity of life, which is
two steps removed from it. Thus
pro-life seems to be based on a linguistic
confusion. Not all human life is
sacred. Not even all human beings,
individual members of the human species,
are sacred. But all human persons are
sacred.
Second, pro-lifers seem to commit the
intellectual sin of biologism, idolatry
of biology, by defining persons in a
merely biological, genetic, material way.
Membership in a biological species is not
morally relevant, not what makes
persons sacred and homicide wrong.
Membership in the human species is no
more
morally relevant than membership in the
subspecies, or race. If racism is
wrong, so is speciesism.
Third, the very young product of
conception, the zygote, has no ability to
perform any of the distinctive activities
that anyone associates with
personhood (reasoning, choosing, loving,
communicating, etc.)-not even
feeling pain, for the zygote has no brain
or nervous system. At first it is
only a single cell. How could anyone call
a single cell a person?
Fourth, it seems to be an obvious mistake
for the pro-lifer to claim that
personhood begins abruptly, at conception,
for personhood develops gradually,
as a matter of degree. Every one of the
characteristics we use to identify
personhood arises and grows gradually
rather than suddenly. Pro-lifers seem
to be victims of simplistic,
black-or-white thinking, but reality is
full
of greys.
Fifth, pro-lifers seem to confuse
potential persons with actual persons.
The
fetus is potentially a person, but it must
grow into an actual person.
Sixth, personhood is not a clear concept.
There is not universal agreement on
it. Different philosophers, scientists,
religionists, moralists, mothers, and
observers define it differently. It is a
matter of opinion where the dividing
line between persons and non-persons
should be located. But what is a matter
of opinion should not be decided or
enforced by law. Law should express
social consensus, and there is no
consensus in our society about
personhood's
beginning or, consequently, about
abortion. One opinion should not be
forced
on all. Pro-choice is not pro-abortion
but, precisely, pro-choice.
Seventh, a fetus cannot be a person
because it is part of another person, the
mother. Persons are wholes, not parts.
Persons are not parts of other persons,
but the fetus is part of another person;
therefore, the fetus is not a person.
There is a common premise hidden behind
all seven of these pro-choice
arguments. It is the premise of
functionalism: defining a person by his or
her functioning or behavior. A
"behavioral definition" is proper and
practical for scientific purposes of
prediction and experimentation, but it
is not adequate for ordinary reason and
common sense, much less for good
philosophy or morality, which should be
based on common sense. Why?
Because common sense distinguishes between
what one is and what one does,
between being and fun functioning, thus
between "being a person" and
"functioning as a person." one cannot
function as a person without being a
person, but one can surely be a person
without functioning as a person. In
deep sleep, in coma, and in early infancy,
nearly everyone will admit there
are persons, but there are no specifically
human functions such as reasoning,
choice, or language. Functioning as a
person is a sign and an effect of being
a person. It is because of what we are,
because of our nature or essence or
being, that we can and do function in
these ways. We have human souls, and
plants do not; that's why we can know
ourselves and plants can't. Function-
alism makes the elementary mistake of
confusing the sign with the thing
signified, the smoke with the fire. As a
zen master would say, "the finger is
fine for pointing at the moon, but woe to
him who mistakes the finger for the
moon."
the functionalist or behaviorist would
reply that he is skeptical of such
talk about natures, essences, or natural
species (as distinct from
conventional, man-made class-groupings).
But the functionalist cannot use
ordinary language without contradicting
himself. He says, e.G., that there is
no such thing as "river?' because all
rivers are different. But how then can
he call them all "rivers"? The very word
"all" should be stricken from his
speech. His nominalism makes nonsense of
ordinary language.
|
samie
Active User, Really EHEALTHy
Joined: 23 Apr 2004 Posts: 665
Posted: 05-06-04 23:22pm
The functionalist claims he is being
simple and commonsensical by not
speaking of essences. He says that
traditional talk about essences is dated,
dispensable, mystical, muddled, and
anti-scientific. But he is wrong. Talk
about essences is not dated but perennial,
built into the very structure of
language, for most words are universals
predictable of many individuals.
Essence-talk is not dispensable without
dispensing with understanding itself
and reducing us to an animal state of mind
where brute empirical fact reigns
alone. Essence-talk is not mystical but
commonsensical. It is not muddled but
clear to any child. It is not anti
scientific, for science seeks universal
laws, truths about the species, not quirks
of the specimen.
Functionalism is not only theoretically
weak, it is also practically
destructive. Modern man is increasingly
reducing his being to functions. We
no longer ask "who is he?" but "what does
he do?" we think of a man as a
fireman, not as a man fighting fires; of a
woman as a teacher, not as a woman
teaching.
Functionalism arises with the modern
erosion of the family. Our civilization
is dying primarily because the family is
dying. Half of our families commit
suicide, for divorce is the family
commiting suicide qua family. But the
family is the place where you learn that
you are loved not because of what
you do, your function, but because of who
you are. What is replacing the
family, where we are valued for our being?
The workplace, where we are valued
for our functioning.
This replacement in society is mirrored by
the replacement in philosophy of
the old "sanctity of life ethic" by the
new "quality of life ethic." in this
new ethic, a human life is judged as
valuable and worth living if and and
only if the judgers decide that it
performs at a certain level - e.G., a
functional i.Q. Of 60 or 40; or an
ability to relate to other people (it
would logically follow that a severely
autistic person does not have enough
"quality" in his life to deserve to live);
or the prospect of a fairly
normal, healthy and pain-free life (thus
active euthanasia, or assisted
suicide, is justified). If someone lacks
the functional criteria of a
"quality" life, he lacks personhood and
the right to life.
I find this ethic more terrifying than the
ethic of the mafia, for the mafia
at least do not rationalize their
assassinations by inventing a new ethic
which pretends that the people they want
to kill are not people. I would feel
more comfortable conversing with a hired
killer than with an abortionist, for
an abortionist is also a hired killer, but
pretends not to be.
The functionalism that is the basis of the
"quality of life ethic" is morally
reprehensible for at least three reasons.
First, it is degrading, demeaning
and destructive to human dignity; it
treats persons like trained seals.
Second, it is elitist; it discriminates
against less perfect performers.
Third, it takes advantage, it is power
play, it is might over right
rationalized. To see this point, let us
dare to ask a very naive and simple
question, a question a child might ask,
especially a child like the one in
"the emperor's new clothes": why do
doctors kill fetuses rather than fetuses
killing doctors? Fetuses do not want to
die. They struggle to live. (i hope
you have all seen "the silent scream and
its sequel.) the answer is power.
Doctors have power, fetuses do not. If
fetuses came equipped with suction
tubes, poisons, and scalpels to use to
defend themselves against their
killers, there would be no abortions.
The eventual social consequences of
functionalism are george bernard shaw's
utopia of the future in which each citizen
would have to appear annually
before a central planning committee to
justify the social utility of his or
her (or its) existence, or else be
painlessly "terminated." that is the
crotch of the functionalist camel whose
nose is already under our tent. The
nose is abortion. The camel is all one
piece. Let the nose in and the rest
will follow. To keep the camel out you
must hit it on the nose.
Returning to our logical analysis, let us
now refute the seven pro-choice
arguments. First, the pro-choicers are
correct to claim that the "person" and
"human being" are not identical, but wrong
to claim that the "human being" is
the broader category and "person" the
narrower subset. It is the other way
round. There are persons who are not
human persons: the three persons of the
trinity, angels, and any rational and
moral extraterrestrials who may exist,
such as the e.T., martians, and someone
who has never heard of the boston red
sox. But though not all persons are
human, all humans are persons. Old humans
are persons, very young humans are
persons, and unborn humans, fetal humans,
are persons too.
How is a person to be defined? The
crucial point for our argument is not
which acts are to count as defining a
person (is it speaking, or reasoning,
or loving?) but the relation of these
personal acts to the person-actor.
(1) is a person one who is consciously
performing personal acts? If so,
people who are asleep are not people, and
we may kill them.
(2) is it one with a present capacity
to perform personal acts? That
would include sleepers, but not people in
coma.
(3) how about one with a history of
performing personal acts? That would
mean that a 17-year-old who was born in a
coma 17 years ago and is
just now coming out of it is not a
person. Also, by this definition
there can be no first personal act, no
personal acts without a history of
past personal acts.
(4) what about one with a future
capacity for performing personal acts?
That would mean that dying persons are
not persons.
(5) surely the correct answer is that
a person is one with a natural, inherent
capacity for performing personal acts.
Why is one able to perform
personal acts, under proper conditions?
Only because one is a person.
One grows into the ability to perform
personal acts only because one
already is the kind of thing that grows
into the ability to perform
personal acts, i.E., a person.
To say that some human beings are not
persons is to say that only achievers,
only successful functioners, only
sufficiently intelligent performers,
qualify as persons and have a right to
life. And who is to say what
"sufficient" is? The line can be drawn at
will-the will of the stronger.
Nature, reason, and justice are then
replaced by artifice, prejudice, and
power. When it is in the self-interest of
certain people to kill certain
other people, whether fetuses, or the
dying, or enemies of the state, or
jews, or armenians, or cambodians, or
heretics, or prophets, the killers will
simply define their victims as non-persons
by pointing out that they do not
meet certain criteria. Who determines the
criteria? Those in power, of
course. Whenever personhood is defined
functionally, the dividing line
between persons and non-persons will be
based on a decision by those in
power, a decision of will. Such a
decision, given the fallenness of human
nature, will inevitably be based on
self-interest. Where there is an interest
in killing persons, they will be defined
as non-persons.
To the second argument, it must be said
that "human being" is not a merely
biological term because the reality it
designates is not a merely biological
reality, though it is a biological
reality. To identify human beings and
persons is not biologism; in fact, it is
just the opposite: it is the
implicit claim that persons, i.E., human
beings, have a human biological body
and a human spiritual soul; that human
souls inhabit human bodies.
The reason we should love, respect, and
not kill human beings is because they
are persons, i.E., subjects, souls, "i's,"
made in the image of god who is I
am. We revere the person, not the
functioning; the doer, not the doing. If
robots could do all that persons can do
behaviorally, they would still not be
persons. Mere machines cannot be persons.
They may function as persons, but
they do not understand that they do not
have freedom, or free will to choose
what they do. They obey their programming
without free choice. They are
artifacts, and artifacts are not persons.
Persons are natural, not artificial.
They develop from within (like fetuses!);
artifacts are made from without.
The connection between the two errors of
(1) reducing persons to functions
and (2) reducing "human being" to a merely
biological category is obvious:
the first is the root cause of the second.
Once a person is defined in terms
of functioning, then zygotes, fetuses and
even normal newborns are no longer
fully persons. What are they, then? Only
members of a biological species,
"human being."
this justifies abortion, of course-and
infanticide. The camel is a one-piece
camel. I know of no argument justifying
abortion that does not also justify
infanticide.
To the third argument: the zygote has no
brain, true, but it does have what
will grow into a brain, just as an infant
does not have speech but has what
will grow into speech. Within the zygote
is an already fully programmed
individuality, from sex and aging to eye
color and aversion to spinach. The
personhood of the person is already there,
like the tuliphood of the tulip
bulb. One must actually be a human being,
after all, to grow a human brain.
The fourth argument is right, of course,
to say that development is gradual-
after conception. Conception is the
break, the clear dividing line, and the
only one. I am the same being from
conception on. Otherwise we would not
speak of the growth and development and
unfolding of that being, of me. I was
once an infant. I was born. I was once
in my mother's womb. My functioning
develops only gradually, but my me has a
sudden beginning. Once again, the
pro-choice objection confuses being a
person with functioning as a person.
Furthermore, if personhood is only a
developing, gradual thing, then we are
never fully persons, because we continue
to grow, at least intellectually and
emotionally and spiritually. Albert
schweitzer said, at 70, "i still don't
know what I want to do when I grow up."
but if we are only partial persons,
then homicide is only partially wrong, and
it is less wrong to kill younger,
lesser persons than older ones.
If it is more permissible to kill a fetus
than to kill an infant because the
fetus is less of a person, then it is for
exactly the same reason more
permissible to kill a seven-year-old, who
has not yet developed his
reproductive system or many of his
educational and communications skills,
than to kill a 27-year-old. The absurd
conclusion follows from defining a
person functionally.
No other line than conception can be drawn
between prepersonhood and
personhood. Birth and viability are the
two most frequently suggested. But
birth is only a change of place and
relationship to the mother and to the
surrounding world (air and food); how
could these things create personhood?
As for viability, it varies with
accidental and external factors like
available technology (incubators). What I
am in the womb-a person or a
non-person cannot be determined by what
machines exist outside the womb! But
viability is determined by such things.
Therefore personhood cannot be
determined by viability.
Fifth, if the fetus is only a potential
person, it must be an actual
something in order to be a potential
person. What is it? An ape?
There are no "potential persons" any more
than there are potential apes. All
persons are actual, as all apes are
actual. Actual apes are potential
swimmers, and actual persons are potential
philosophers. The being is actual,
the functioning is potential. The
objection confuses "a potential person"
with "a potentially functioning
person"-functionalism again.
Sixth, is personhood an unclear concept?
If it were a matter of degree,
determined by degree of functioning, then
it would indeed be unclear, and a
matter of opinion, who is a person and who
is not. Refuting objection four
undercuts objection six.
Personhood is indeed unclear-for
functionalism. Such questions as the
following are not clearly answerable:
which features count as proof of
personhood? Why? How do we decide? Who
decides? What gives them that right?
And how much of each feature is necessary
for personhood? And who decides
that, and why? Also, all the
performance-qualifications adduced for
personhood are difficult to measure
objectively and with certainty. To use
the unclear, not universally accepted,
hard-to-measure functionalist concept
of personhood to decide the sharply
controversial issue of who is a person
and who may be killed is to try to clarify
the obsure by the more obscure,
obscuram per obscurius.
Seventh, if the fetus is only a part of
the mother, a hilariously absurd
consequence follows. The relation of part
to whole is what logicians call a
transitive relation: if a is part of b and
b is part of c, then a must be
part of c. If a wall is part of a room
and the room is part of a building,
then the wall must be part of that
building. If a toe is part of a foot and
a
foot is part of a body, then the toe is
part of the body. Now if the fetus is
a part of the mother, then the parts of
the fetus must be parts of the
mother. But in that case, every pregnant
woman has four eyes and four feet,
and half of all pregnant women have
penises! Clearly, the absurd conclusion
came from the false premise that the fetus
is only part of the mother.
I have refuted the pro-choice position (1)
in general, by the basic pro-life
syllogism, (2) foundationally, by
identifying and refuting functionalism as
the root pro-choice error, and (3)
specifically, by refuting each of the
seven pro-choice arguments against fetal
personhood but just suppose all of
my arguments are somehow inconclusive.
Suppose I was wrong in my very first
point, that abortion is a clear evil.
Suppose abortion is a difficult,
obscure, uncertain issue. Even if you
take this "softest pro-choice"
position, which we can call "abortion
agnosticism," you stand refuted by the
following quadrilemma.
Either the fetus is a person, or not; and
either we know what it is, or not.
Thus there are four and only four
possibilities: (1) that it is not a person
and we know that, (2) that it is a person
and we know that, (3) that it is a
person but we do not know that, and (4)
that it is not a person and we do not
know that. Now what is abortion in each
of these four cases?
In case (1), abortion is perfectly
permissible. We do no wrong if we kill
what is not a person and we know it is not
a person-e.G., if we fry a fish.
But no one has ever proved with certainty
that a fetus is not a person. If
there exists anywhere such a proof, please
show it to me and I shall convert
to pro-choice on the spot if I cannot
refute it.
If we do not have case (1) we have either
(2) or (3) or (4). What is abortion
in each of these cases? It is either
homicide, or manslaughter, or criminal
negligence.
In case (2), where the fetus is a person
and we know that, abortion is homicide.
For killing an innocent person knowing it
is an innocent person is homicide.
In case (3), abortion is manslaughter, for
it is killing an innocent person
not knowing and intending the full,
deliberate extent of homicide. It is like
driving over a man-shaped overcoat in the
street, which may be a drunk or may
only be an old coat. It is like shooting
at a sudden movement in a bush which
may be your hunting companion or may be
only a pheasant. It is like
fumigating an apartment building with a
highly toxic chemical not knowing
whether everyone is safely evacuated. If
the victim is a person, you have
committed manslaughter. And if not?
Even in case (4), even if abortion kills
what is not in fact a person, but
the killer does not know for sure that it
is not a person, we have criminal
negligence, as in the above three cases if
there happened to be no one in the
coat, the bush, or the building, but the
driver, the hunter, or the fumigator
did not know that, and nevertheless drove,
shot or fumigated. Such negligence
is instinctively and universally condemned
by all reasonable individuals and
societies as personally immoral and
socially criminal; and cases (2) and (3),
homicide and manslaughter, are of course
condemned even more strongly. We do
not argue politely over whether such
behavior is right or wrong. We
wholeheartedly condemn it, even when we do
not know whether there is a person
there, because the killer did not know
that a person was not there. Why do we
not do the same with abortion?
The answer to that question is not an easy
one to admit. It is this: if we do
not see the awfulness of abortion, that is
not because the facts and
arguments are unclear but because our own
consciences are unclear. Mother
teresa says, "abortion kills twice. It
kills the body of the baby and it
kills the conscience of the mother."
abortion is profoundly anti-women. Three
quarters of its victims are women: half
the babies and all the mothers.
If mother teresa is right, the second
killing that abortion does is even
worse than the first, if souls are more
important than bodies. If abortion
kills consciences, it kills souls. To the
extent that conscience is killed,
repentance is killed, and without
repentance and faith we simply cannot be
saved-unless jesus was a liar or a fool
when he told us that.
This is not to condemn the personal
motives or integrity of all who abort. We
must distinguish the sin from the sinner
and hate and judge the sin but not
the sinner. Both aborters and justifiers
of abortion may be victims as much
as victimizers: victims of propaganda,
prejudice and passion. Before they
victimize their babies' bodies, their own
souls are victimized-their
thoughts, their consciences. But the
victimization must start somewhere, the
buck stops somewhere, and not in safe
abstractions like "society" but in the
choices of individuals.
All of us are implicated in some way, for
"the only thing that is necessary
for the triumph of evil is that the good
do nothing." what should we do? For
one thing, we must put up one hell of a
stink, for abortion is, precisely,
one hell of a stink.
There is a time to be polite and scholarly
and a time to tell the truth plain
and prickly. Plainly put, abortion comes
from hell and it can lead us to hell
if not repented. Any unrepented sin can,
and we all need repentance, whether
we abort or hate or lust or despair or
coldly condemn. But abortion is more
likely than most sins to be unrepented
because there are so many pro-choice
voices justifying it. The justification
of abortion can be more lethal than
abortion itself.
|
oopoopoop
Extremely EHEALTHy
Joined: 18 Mar 2004 Posts: 1205 Location: ,
Thanks: 34
Thanked:2
Posted: 05-06-04 23:38pm
Fine, the christian that this is addressed
to know where they should stand, then.
|
samie
Active User, Really EHEALTHy
Joined: 23 Apr 2004 Posts: 665
Posted: 05-07-04 00:22am
Applies to secular society as well
|
insurancegirl
Especially EHEALTHy
Joined: 25 Sep 2003 Posts: 5286
Posted: 05-07-04 00:26am
The baby inside you is a person, the
moment it is conceived! It is not just
cells, it is to form into a beautiful
little girl/boy!
~jennifer~
|
samie
Active User, Really EHEALTHy
Joined: 23 Apr 2004 Posts: 665
Posted: 05-07-04 00:32am
Its all very good stating the truth but
the problem is we have those who lie about
the truth and wish to distort the truth
even though they know they are doing so
– it is the people who are only
after truth that in the end get hurt by
these people it is therefore imperative we
post truths common sense and facts. So
the people themselves can freely
distinguish between truth and deceit
|
zilbucks
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 25 Apr 2004 Posts: 210 Location: NY
Posted: 05-07-04 00:46am
Your leaving out hermaphrodites- it could
be a beatuiful boyirl to- could be once it
is considered to be a human being
|
samie
Active User, Really EHEALTHy
Joined: 23 Apr 2004 Posts: 665
Posted: 05-07-04 00:49am
So what even those deserve to live
|
zilbucks
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 25 Apr 2004 Posts: 210 Location: NY
Posted: 05-07-04 01:00am
Even those deserve to live? Those as in
it- a prolife person would say even a
human who is hermaphrodite deserves to
live- and I agree they do, buttttt again
given situations, its not always possible
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JanetBee
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 28 Apr 2004 Posts: 332
Posted: 05-07-04 01:11am
Sorry, I can't see that your source has
demonstrated personhood, except in a dna
human sense, and to his own logical
satisfaction.
|
jessechaseme
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 28 Jan 2004 Posts: 232
Posted: 05-07-04 03:00am
Sami
"its all very good stating the truth but
the problem is we have those who lie about
the truth and wish to distort the truth
even though they know they are doing so –
it is the people who are only after truth
that in the end get hurt by these people
it is therefore imperative we post truths
common sense and facts. So the people
themselves can freely distinguish between
truth and deceit "
i think you should take some of your own
advice.
|
samie
Active User, Really EHEALTHy
Joined: 23 Apr 2004 Posts: 665
Posted: 05-07-04 17:17pm
I am waiting to see a better definition of
personhood!
|
oopoopoop
Extremely EHEALTHy
Joined: 18 Mar 2004 Posts: 1205 Location: ,
Thanks: 34
Thanked:2
Posted: 05-07-04 17:45pm
The legal one should do it, then.
|
samie
Active User, Really EHEALTHy
Joined: 23 Apr 2004 Posts: 665
Posted: 05-07-04 17:51pm
Hmmm thats suggesting the legal system and
laws are always right although I am a law
abiding citizen I can obviously see many
instances over history and today where
laws and the legal system is wrong.
Let me guess -(in in thicko's voice)
well at least they've got this en right
-lets go an smash a winda
|
oopoopoop
Extremely EHEALTHy
Joined: 18 Mar 2004 Posts: 1205 Location: ,
Thanks: 34
Thanked:2
Posted: 05-07-04 18:09pm
It is simply illogical to confer
personhood on 8 cells in a dish.
|
samie
Active User, Really EHEALTHy
Joined: 23 Apr 2004 Posts: 665
Posted: 05-07-04 18:11pm
Just one question - why?
|
oopoopoop
Extremely EHEALTHy
Joined: 18 Mar 2004 Posts: 1205 Location: ,
Thanks: 34
Thanked:2
Posted: 05-07-04 18:20pm
Because it is a squidgy mess.
|
samie
Active User, Really EHEALTHy
Joined: 23 Apr 2004 Posts: 665
Posted: 05-07-04 18:22pm
So a person becomes a person only if they
live upto your expectations of physical
good looks?
Sorry not good enough!
|
oopoopoop
Extremely EHEALTHy
Joined: 18 Mar 2004 Posts: 1205 Location: ,
Thanks: 34
Thanked:2
Posted: 05-07-04 18:36pm
Is for me.
|
samie
Active User, Really EHEALTHy
Joined: 23 Apr 2004 Posts: 665
Posted: 05-07-04 18:46pm
Is that typical of pro choice?
Without saying to much - dear members and
visitors of the forum - goes to show you
what kind of person this is - poo gives us
the lowest extreem but still extreem when
you put what poo is saying into
perspective, if someone decides you are
not good looking enough it is okay to
regard you as not a person and therefore
not worthy of rights. Can physical
apperience determin wether we are persons
worthy of rights?
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