On the question of abortion being moral, the
answer is clearly that terminating a fetus' life under certain circumstances is
not only moral, but it is also our responsibility to terminate it if the quality of life is in question for the
fetus. A second major reason is that to
declare abortion immoral would mean that
we would have to consider the factor of how the conception came about. This cannot and should not be done.
Quality is a major factor in the question of
the morality of abortion. When parents
decide to keep or not keep a baby the issue of adoption does not play into
this. The reason for this is that once
the baby is born that the parents may change their mind if they want to keep
it. Parents must decide at the onset of
the pregnancy to decide if they can in good conscience bring a child into the
world, if the answer is yes, then people should proceed with the pregnancy and
then determine whether they want to give the child up for adoption. It is a parent's moral responsibility to make
sure that the environments which the child will be brought into will be
healthy and supportive. It is a far
greater crime to treat a child poorly for eighteen years then it is to
terminate a fetus that cannot think, feel or is aware of its existence.
On the second point of making the way that
conception occurred a non-factor I am not saying that having the babies of
rapists or in cases of incest is okay.
Still, for the argument that abortion is immoral, you must argue that
the action is immoral, not the child. The child cannot be either at this
point. If we are then talking about the
act of abortion then who is to determine right and wrong. A court of law should have no place in this
decision. The primary interests in this pregnancy should make the decision
themselves. This would normally be the
parents of the fetus. The action in the
case of rape is defiantly immoral, but the fetus is not. To say that the
abortion is moral because the pregnancy arose from a crime is to place a
value judgement on a child before it is
born. A fetus is just the product of sperm and an egg, an accidental meeting
that resulted in a pregnancy. If the
fetus is not at fault but can be terminated, why should a different set of
standards be in effect because two young people experimenting with sex made a
mistake and the end result was the same as in the case of rape. I offer you the
explanation that the circumstances surrounding the pregnancy can be deemed
moral or immoral, but the fetus and therefore the abortion cannot. The outcome was an accidental meeting of a
sperm and an egg in both instances. The moment of conception does not assemble
a human the instant that the egg
hits the sperm, it takes a full nine
months. During this gestation period
parts develop slowly, not all at once. Science has determined when the cut
off is that a fetus can think and feel
etc... If it were impossible for us to
know when a fetus could feel and think than the obvious answer would be that it
is immoral, but we can tell and therefore it is not. I think that it is
important to remember that morals can be established for a society in
particular, such as abortion in immoral, but cannot be changed by the context
of how the pregnancy occurred. Either the termination of life is moral or it
isn't. By this line of reasoning you can
follow me to the logical conclusion of this paragraph. If it is logical and ethical to terminate the
life of a fetus because of a particular circumstance, then it is moral to do so
under any circumstance.
A credible objection to my main position is
that abortion is wrong except in the case of rape or incest. One good reason for this is that young
parents of a fetus that made a mistake and got pregnant made that initial
decision to have sex, while the rape or incest victims did not. A second reason
is that we as a society should not force a mother to relive her crime every day
for nine months and possibly longer if she kept the baby.
These two statements do not even come close to
undermining my position. My primary
problem with the above argument is that the person on that side is putting a
value on human life. The fact that the
pregnancy occurred illegally makes that human being worth less than the one
that was conceived by accident. The
argument above hits a brick wall if you pursue it further. A person cannot come
up with a justifiable reason why the fetus is worth less as a human because of
the nature of the conception. At which
point the person on the side of the argument must admit that values are the
same and that total value is zero as a human being because it isn't one yet. As
to the second reason, why should we remind a seventeen year old girl every day
for nine months and possibly longer because in a moment of haste they forgot to
use a condom.
An objection to my first statement about the
quality of life could be argued that after the pregnancy is over the baby could
be given up for adoption. Along this
line of reasoning the quality of life does not play into the factor.
This argument is filled with holes. When a person is 18 years old and loses a leg
in a car accident the leg is gone, never to be seen again. The case is much the same for a young girl,
she has carried this thing around for the better part of a year. A new mothers natural response to giving the
fetus up would be the same if after the accident the doctors asked the victim
if they wanted to keep their leg. Of
course the answer would be yes.
Therefore having an abortion take this problem out of the equation and
lets a mother make an informed decision whether or not to have a child and
whether or not to give it for adoption.
A second problem is the cost of a birth.
What if there is no insurance, and there is no one to pay the immense
cost of a hospital stay. Why should the
same young girl go into financial debt for something that she is not going to
keep, and she has no way of knowing if that babies life will be any better than
what she could have provided for.
To conclude this paper is a difficult task. I have tried to outline why abortion is moral
by guiding the reader through a series of steps outlining thinking toward the
fetus and we should regard it. The way
that we should regard it is as a lifeless thing until it can feel or think,
whichever comes first. This is not to
that abortions should be common, cheap, or as easy to get as a physical
is. Circumstances involved around the
conception including the how and why should not be regarded. One abortion cannot be moral while anither is
not. I would guess that I am taking an
absolutists point of view on this subject.
I also tried to state that social context must be taken into account,
and that abortion is either one way or the other, indepedent of circumstances
surrounding how the pregnancy occured. I
have also tried to show how quality of life must be added into the decision of
whether or not to have a child. I will
lastly close with the statement that while the men of the world try to hash
this controversy out, it is important to remember who physically has the child.
And that it is ultimatly the womens decision whether or not to have a
child. If abortion is declared immoral
than it will eentually lead to laws making it illegal as well. When this happens we will see the practice go
underground and have a lot of deaths among women attempting to have this done
in an unclean environment.
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