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“ Describe and evaluate any two contrasting theoretical approaches to the
moral debate of abortion.” * * * It is widely accepted that the fact of abortion
has been a subject of conversation and controversy for many decades. Since the
proportion of people who accept abortion as a ‘normal’ procedure is equal to the
proportion of those who think of abortion as a ‘crime’, through time a lot of
measurements have been taken against abortion but concerning it’s defense as
well. Although the fact of abortion has been examined through it’s scientific
and religious side, in this assignment we will try and examine abortion from an
ethical point of view. The best way for someone to refer to abortion on an
ethical basis would probably be through the description and evaluation of the
subject based on two of the most known theoretical approaches: those of Kant’s
and of Utilitarianism (Act and Rule). Beginning with the approach of
Utilitarianism, we must say that Utilitarianism, is concerned basically with
pleasure and with pain. Therefore someone should be concerned with the amounts
of pleasure and pain in situations where abortion is permitted as contrasted
with the amounts of pleasure and pain where abortion is forbidden. It might be
suggested that the main consideration would be the interests of the fetus: not
only can its future life be expectedly happy (or at least having a balance of
happiness over suffering) it might also be the case that the abortion itself is
painful, particularly if it occurs later in the pregnancy.
However this focus on
the fetus is unwarranted since any suffering involved in the abortion itself can
be avoided by simply aborting the pregnancy sooner (before the fetus has even
developed the capability of suffering), or with painless techniques. The direct
suffering of the fetus can therefore be no argument against abortion generally,
only the bad practice of it. A more significant consideration exists if we
hypothesize that the future life of the fetus involves a probable balance of
happiness over suffering for the fetus. This would seem to be a definite point
against abortion, though not, a dominant one. The second party that we should
consider are the parents and other family, and guardians if the alternative to
abortion is adoption. According to some studies, having a baby appears to
decrease the happiness in a relationship - even in those cases where the
pregnancy is desired. But again, this need not be considered too much, it is not
a dominant consideration. As is the case with many issues in a utilitarian
system, the rightness or wrongness of the act in question turns mainly not on
the effects of the act on the agent, nor on the beings directly affected by the
act, but on the less direct effects on the community at large. That means that
the issue of abortion actually becomes one of the desirability of increasing or
decreasing the population.
Given that there must be some population size that
can be regarded as the “perfect” size, if we are allowed to place it this way
for a society, it is clear that Utility will ban new births above this amount
while below this population size Utility will prescribe reproduction. So the
utilitarian, who suggests that the future happiness of the child, combined with
the estimated value of the effects on others, is such that Utility opposes
abortion, must admit that this would imply that Utility prescribes an increase
in population and that this would apply to anyone capable of producing a child.
So Utility is generally against abortion only when it is generally for raising
the population. In terms of utility, the actual act of abortion is not a
particularly significant one. A brief mention must be made of why it is that the
relative effects on the community at large are dominant in this issue, and why
the other considerations are not. It must be remembered that the raising of a
child in a modern developed country has a very large cost in financial terms,
which is highly significant. It is well known that the amount required to raise
one child in a developed country could probably raise many more in a poorer part
of the world. So if increasing the human population is the aim, this can be
achieved more effectively elsewhere.
However in these days of increasing
environmental pressure and terrible inequality, increasing the human population
is not what we should be aiming for. Of course at this point someone could ask
him/herself “If everybody became a utilitarian, would the human race become
extinct?” The answer would be in this case no, because, if everybody were
utilitarian, these problems would not exist to the same degree. In utilitarian
terms, a general prescription either for or against reproduction is very hard to
justify because each case would have its own relevant and specific features.
However, we come to the assumption that reproduction is the cheapest method of
recruiting moral agents, even granting that it has a high cost in time and
effort and of course this would require empirical support. Someone should not of
course forget to refer to the distinctions within the Utilitarian approach in
Act and Rule Utilitarianism. Rule utilitarianism is a formulation
utilitarianism, which maintains that a behavioural code or rule is morally right
if the consequences of adopting that rule are more favourable than unfavourable
to everyone. The above is contrasted with act utilitarianism, which maintains
that the morality of each action is to be determined in relation to the
favourable or unfavourable consequences that emerge from that action. The
principle of rule-utilitarianism is a test only for the morality of moral rules,
such as stealing is wrong and not a test for particular actions. Adopting a rule
against theft clearly has more favourable consequences than unfavourable
consequences for everyone.
The same is true for moral rules against lying or
murdering. Rule-utilitarianism, then, offers a method for judging behaviour.
More general speaking, act utilitarianism regards each individual action as the
fundamental unit of moral evaluation while rule utilitarianism applies the
principle of utility not to individuals actions but to general rules under which
those actions fall. Continuing with Kant’s approach, even though we know that he
does not addresses the issue of abortion as topic directly, we could search into
his second critique of his discussions and that is about the moral agent and how
we should treat people. By this formulation Kant is arguing that human beings
are not simply of subjective importance to them, but are of objective importance
to all others as ends in themselves. Therefore, in making moral decisions we
should act in a way that recognizes the objective importance of every other
individual. The above could probably be used for a pro-life position. The
pro-life arguments, which are against abortion, are the following: 1. It is a
murder to kill an innocent human being 2.
A human fetus is an innocent human
being 3. Therefore the conclusion is that it is a crime to kill a human fetus On
the other side, we have perhaps a stronger argument and a more philosophical
which is that although the fetus has some future rights to self-freedom, if it
was the case that the child would be severely handicapped to the point where
self-consciousness would be impossible or their freedom to take control of their
being was nil, then perhaps Kant would argue pro-choice. Pro-choice suggests
that a fetus is not a human being until it: · Becomes conscious (sentient) · Is
viable · Is born Although pro-life suggests that a fetus is just an earlier
stage of a human being, knowing the scientific stages of a pregnancy where from
0-18 weeks the fetus is in a vegetative state and furthermore is not a moral
patient since it does not have self-consciousness, abortion can be justified.
Like Singer suggests: “If ‘human’ is taken as equivalent to ‘person’ which
asserts that the fetus is a human being is clearly false because one cannot
plausibly argue that a fetus is either rational or self-conscious. If on the
other hand, ‘human’ is taken to mean no more than 'member of the species Homo
sapiens’, then the conservative defence of the life of the fetus is based on a
characteristic lacking moral significance.
My suggestion, then, is that we
accord the life of a fetus no greater value than the life of a nonhuman animal
at a similar level of rationality, self-consciousness, awareness, capacity to
feel, etc. Since no fetus is a person, no fetus has the same claim to life as a
person. The applied ethical issue of abortion involves a consideration of the
reasons for or against terminating the life of a fetus. Much has been written on
the issue of abortion both in the popular press and in the philosophical
literature. The debate focuses on two distinct issues: (1) whether a human fetus
has a right to life, and, if so, (2) whether the rights of the mother ever
override the fetus's right. Often the issues are discussed independently of each
other. Discussion of the first issue, regarding a fetus's right to life, usually
draws on the concept of moral personhood. A being is a morally significant
person when it is a rights holder, and we are under moral obligation to that
being. For example, I am a morally significant person and am entitled to the
right to life, which others have a moral duty to acknowledge.
The problem for
moral theorists is to establish a criterion that explains why I am a morally
significant person, and a fly is not a morally significant person. Some
religious philosophers suggest that we are morally significant persons at the
moment of conception. Non-religious criteria include, when we first take the
human form (in the fourth month of pregnancy), when our organs become
differentiated, and when the fetus can survive outside the womb (both around the
seventh month of pregnancy). Some philosophers suggest more general criteria
such as when a being is self-aware or rational. These criteria are not exhibited
until an infant is one or two years old. The reason of personhood selected has
important implications on the morality of abortion. If personhood is conferred
on a being at the moment of conception, then, all things considered, aborting a
fetus is immoral. On the other hand, if we select a reason such as
self-awareness, then, all things considered, aborting a fetus is not immoral.
The challenge is in providing reasons in support of one reason over another. But
even if we all could agree on a reason of personhood, such as the moment of
conception, the abortion debate would not be over. After that point, questions
arise about whether the mother's right of self-determination overrides the
rights of the fetus.
It is the mother's body that is affected by the pregnancy,
and it is her emotional and social life that will be drastically altered for at
least the next nine months and beyond. These factors carry at least some weight.
Other potentially overriding factors complicate the rights of the fetus, such as
whether the pregnancy resulted from rape, or contraception failure. Whatever the
decision of a woman will be, it is a fact that she should be aware of all the
elements mentioned above. I personally believe what John Locke implies in his
Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1690) that “it is part of the worship of
God, not to kill another man, not to procure abortion, not to expose their
children, not
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