Well, when you start inserting real-life factors (social services, adoption) into a purely theoretical discussion, it tends to dilute the main philosophical points being debated. Isn't the basic point here that society, as a general proposition, does not allow Person A to kill Person B simply because Person B's existence is harmful to Person A? Sure there are a few exceptions (self-defense, insanity of Person A, etc.), but the basic philosophical point here is that our society values Person A's life and Person B's life equally, and if for some reason the existence of one of them is detrimental to the other the general rule is that allowing one of them to kill the other is not acceptable.grizbeer wrote:The food angle is interesting because if a mother starved her child (or willfully killed it) because she didn't have enough food, she would certainly be charged with murder. The difference, of course, is that there is an alternative to starving to death - namely social services and/or adoption. With an un-born child that is threatening the mothers life there is no reasonable alternative to aborting the child to save the mother, unless the child is developed enough to survive outside the womb.
That, I think, is a good point. Of course, it becomes a bit of a spectrum (i.e., how much danger does the mother's life have to be in before it becomes acceptable to kill the fetus in order to end the risk? If there is a 2% chance that the pregnancy will kill her? 10%? 50%?) But, I can't disagree with the basic point...Of course in the case of a very young child (such as an un-born child) if the mother dies then the child dies also, so there is an substantial argument that could be made that saving the life of the mother is more important than saving the life of the child in order to save at least 1 life (lessor of 2 evils).
--GL