| | Infanticide at the Altar of Indecison
When I first discovered Rand, my biggest stumbling blocks with her were atheism, abortion, and homosexuality.
I found my theism the easiest to give up, after reading her "indestructible robot" argument I found that a personal god was superfluous so far as ethics are concerned, indeed, absurd.
I simply assumed that her views on homosexuality were wrong, as I know myself, (I am bi) and she did not know me. This is a non-issue except for some of the old-guard and a few at ARI. Since, in any case, Objectivists do respect the rights of homosexuals, I don't frankly care about their personal opinions, or whether they prefer Beethoven to Mozart. (I'm a Ludwigian, myself.)
But abortion required some intellectual and emotional adjustment. As with Kurt's last post and with Enright's, I wonder why the question of a woman's responsibility for her actions (inaction is consent) is so consistently ignored on this one issue.
For example, let's say that I arrange to rent a house to own, and that I live on the property while it is constructed. I negotiate to buy the property, but before closing, I change my mind, leave the house open to the elements, watch it be destroyed by water damage, and tell the builders that it was just a potential home. It wasn't a real home yet, destroying it wasn't like arson.
Now, of course, this is an absurd extreme and an imperfect analogy. But why is it that we expect people to hold up to their contracts and to close on 30-year mortgages in 30 days, while some of us have no problem killing a baby one hour before delivery, but not one hour after? Again, are 120 days not enough to decide, do we really need to embrace infanticide at the altar of indecison?
On the other hand, before neural activity in the fetus, which is most certainly absent before quickening (around 4 mo.) there is no consciousness, no mind, no sentience, no feeling of any sort. I would certainly call the fetus alive, and even human, but I wouldn't call it a PERSON before that point. Indeed, it is at the ontological level of a sponge - a vegetable. So the question becomes, (for me) how do you balance a woman's autonomy, limited by her own actions, with the rights of a developing person.
I disagree with Robert Malcom about the essentiality of sapience, and whether a fetus is human life, or if its being human life matters. Humanity, (beloning to the species Homo sapiens depends solely upon genetics. We speak of human blood versus pig's blood, and live flesh as opposed to dead skin. A fetus is both human and alive. At some point it is also sentient. At that point, I stipulate that it is a person. I deny that sapience is necessary in order for an individual to be granted the status of personhood. Sapience is self-reflective thought, something most children don't achieve untill well after toilet-training, and few leftists ever achieve.
I would ask Mr. Enright who exactly (other than the conscientious adults involved) is suffering if one aborts a 3 month vegetative fetus (embryo) with no neural activity? If no person suffers, what is the crime? If there is no crime, what does the state have to say in the matter?
Rand made me an atheist in a week, but comfort with at least early abortion took me some time to adjust to. If God exists, he won't mind the slight. I'm more worried about protecting innocent persons.
Ted Keer (Edited by Ted Keer on 3/06, 6:17pm)
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