RangerDave wrote:
Aizle wrote:
For me the most compelling argument for when a fetus becomes it's own entity is the point at which it is viable outside the womb. Until that point it's really still a subset of the mother.
I disagree. Once the fetus develops even a rudimentary brain and nervous system, it begins to have an independent experience of the world - if the mother stubs her toe, she experiences the pain, but if the fetus is injured,
the fetus experiences the pain, not the mother. Going a bit further down the line (though still pre-viability), the brain is sufficiently developed for most/all the elements of what we think of as human consciousness to occur. Certainly at that point, I don't see how the fetus can be considered anything but a separate human entity. Physically dependent on the mother's body for survival, sure, but still a distinct entity with its own mental/emotional existence and its own experience of the world around it. I'm not sure where exactly in that gray area to draw the line, but I think the degree to which a fetus has a separate consciousness and distinct experience of the world is a more valid benchmark than the chances of its survival outside the womb.
This is a very good point, but one that, I believe, misses the more egregious problem with Aizle's argument. That is, any definition which cannot be determined except by trial and error on a case-by-case basis fails, inherently, as a
bright-line definition.
That is to say, the only way to determine if an abortion is legal is to pull the fetus out of the mother and see if it survives. If it does, congratulations, you didn't commit murder. If you *don't* do this, you're now open to reasonable doubt, and can (and should!) be convicted of murder. Good luck convincing a doctor to do this under such a law.