Article Text
Abstract
Hendricks set out to construct an antiabortion version of Jeff McMahan’s Embryo Rescue case in which you have two choices—(1) save a woman from an unwilling pregnancy or (2) save a fetus from being killed. In his Pregnancy Rescue case, he contends we ought to choose (2), which he thinks shows abortion is immoral. However, I argue the Pregnancy Rescue case is a false dilemma because you can save both. I propose an alternative, more elegant dilemma, the Ectogenesis Rescue case with the same choices (1) and (2). Hendricks also believes his case can serve as an antiabortion version of Thomson’s Violinist case, showing that abortion is immoral even if a fetus is not a person. However, while Thomson’s Violinist substitutes the fetus with a person, Hendricks fails to substitute the fetus with something that is not a person. I propose an alternative, the Snakebite Rescue case, which does this.
- Ethics- Medical
- Abortion - Induced
- Embryos and Fetuses
Statistics from Altmetric.com
Linked Articles
- Original research
- Response
Read the full text or download the PDF:
Other content recommended for you
- Abortion and Ectogenesis: Moral Compromise
- The inconsistency argument: why apparent pro-life inconsistency undermines opposition to induced abortion
- Subjects of ectogenesis: are ‘gestatelings’ fetuses, newborns or neither?
- Abortion, infanticide and moral context
- Critical notice—Defending life: a moral and legal case against abortion choice by Francis J Beckwith
- Personhood, harm and interest: a reply to Alberto Giubilini and Francesca Minerva
- Pregnancy and superior moral status: a proposal for two thresholds of personhood
- Is there a ‘new ethics of abortion’?
- The Two tragedies argument
- Regulating abortion after ectogestation