Transcript Slide 1

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Is Abortion Wrong?
II
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Judith Jarvis Thomson: “A Defense of Abortion”
Thomson’s Project
• Thomson grants for the sake of argument the premise that a
fertilized egg is a person.
• Thomson challenges the idea that one can argue effectively
from this premise to the conclusion that all abortion is morally
impermissible.
• Thomson claims that the “Basic Argument” cannot justify the
notion that all abortion is morally impermissible.
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The “Basic Argument” (95)
• The squidge is a person and every person has a right to life.
• Therefore, the squidge has a right to life.
• The mother has a right to decide what happens in and to her
body.
• But the squidge’s right to life outweighs the mother’s right to
decide what happens in and to her body.
• Therefore, the squidge may not be killed; an abortion may
not be performed.
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Thomson suggests the following (minimal case):
• Sometimes abortion is morally permissible: at least in
(some?) cases where an abortion is necessary to save the
life of the mother, and (some?) cases where pregnancy
stems from rape.
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The “Extreme View” (96)
• Abortion is morally impermissible, even where it is
necessary to save the mother’s life.
• The Basic Argument does not justify the Extreme View.
• The Basic Argument does not invoke the mother’s right to
life, which, along with the squidge’s, cannot both be satisfied.
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Another Argument in Support of the “Extreme
View” (96)
Suppose a woman has become pregnant, but learns she
has a heart condition such that she will die if she carries the
squidge to term.
1. In killing the squidge, one would be directly killing an
innocent person.
2. Directly killing an innocent person is murder.
3. Murder is morally impermissible.
4. Therefore, killing the squidge is morally impermissible.
• Thomson claims this argument also fails.
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The Famous Violinist Thought Experiment
Thought Experiment: Argument from analogy.
You are kidnapped by the Society of Music Lovers, plugged
into a world-famous violinist to share your kidney.
• Version 1: The violinist will die if unplugged.
• Version 2: Saving the violinist is killing you.
Thomson attacks the second premise of the Argument for
the Extreme View (directly killing an innocent person is
murder), or possibly the third premise (murder is morally
impermissible).
• Directly killing the violinist is not morally impermissible.
• So, directly killing an innocent is not always morally
impermissible.
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The Famous Violinist Thought Experiment
“If anything in the world is true, it is that you do not commit
murder, you do not do what is impermissible if you reach
around your back and unplug yourself from that violinist to
save your life.” (97)
• So at least in the case of rape-induced pregnancy, an
abortion would not be morally impermissible.
• This alone is enough to show the Argument for the Extreme
View fails.
• So we should reject the Extreme View.
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What the Right to Life is Not
Even where we grant that the squidge has a right to life…
The right to life does not include a right to be given at least
the bare minimum of what one needs for continued life (9899).
• If it did, then there would be a very short argument to
prohibiting abortion except in cases where the squidge’s life
threatened the mother’s life.
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Henry Fonda Thought Experiment
Would Henry Fonda be acting in a morally
impermissible way if he refused to fly
out to put his hand on your fevered
brow, given that this is the only way
to save your life?
• We don’t, by having a right to life, have
a right to the bare minimum of what we
need for continued life.
The right to life does not amount to
the right not to be killed by anyone.
If it did, then there would be a
very short argument to prohibiting
abortion except perhaps in cases
where the squidge’s life threatened
the mother’s life.
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Famous Violinist Thought Experiment Revisited
“[T]he fact that for continued life that violinist needs the
continued use of your kidneys does not establish that he has
a right to be given the continued use of your kidneys.” (99)
• Just as it would be very nice for Henry Fonda to fly across
the country to put his hand to your fevered brow to save
your life, it would be very nice if you continue to let the
violinist use your kidneys… but he does not have a right to
your kidneys, even granted that he has a right to life.
• Just the same, the squidge’s right to life does not amount to
the right to continue to use the mother’s body without her
consent.
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What the Right to Life Is and What this Might
Imply About Abortion
“[T]he right to life consists not in the right not to be killed, but
rather in the right not to be killed unjustly.” (100).
• So even granting that the squidge has a right to life, for
abortions to be shown to be morally impermissible, it must
be shown that abortion kills the squidge unjustly.
If this is what the right to life amounts to, then abortions are
morally permissible:
• in (some) cases in which the squidge threatens the mother’s
life;
• in (some) cases in which the mother’s pregnancy has
resulted from rape; and
• in some cases in which the mother has conscientiously used
contraception, but this contraception has failed.
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People Seeds Thought Experiment
As opposed to cases of pregnancy resulting from rape, it
seems reasonable to think that a woman who voluntarily
engages in sex with the full knowledge that she might
become pregnant, it seems the squidge has some claim to
live off of the mother.
• But even this depends on the details.
Suppose people-seeds drifted about in the air like pollen,
and if you open your windows, one may drift in and take
root in your carpet or upholstery.
• You don’t want children, so you fit your windows with a fine
mesh, the very best you can buy.
• As it happens, one somehow slips through and takes root.
• Does this person-plant who now develops have a right to the
use of your house?
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People Seeds Thought Experiment
If the people-seeds do not have a right to live and develop
in your living room carpet, why should a squidge have a
right to live in the womb of a woman who has
conscientiously used contraception, but which has failed
through no fault of the woman?