I am framing it in any position, just raising an issue that is part of the discussion. I think maybe yes, you think maybe no, we chat and see what happens. — Rank Amateur
this is a legal definition of Implied consent — Rank Amateur
In the case of the robbery, there are 2 acts of free will, one walking down the street, and the robber's to rob them. If I flip your logic to the robber it goes like this - I am a robber it is what I do, I work this street - there is some probability that some innocent person will walk down it, if they do I rob them. I am not responsible, because they walked down the street. — Rank Amateur
And most abortions - really all that fall within guidelines - are not serious as in dangerous procedures. I guess that for the serious stuff you need quad- or quintuple opinions and no end of eyes looking at it. In that kind of environment if I were a doctor or in the legal department I wouldn't get out of bed in the morning or go to bed at night. — tim wood
What I say is that if she wants one, that's enough justification for her to pursue one. — tim wood
As to "a sensible moral judgment," you simply seem incapable of processing any question about that. But I try again: whose moral judgment, and on what authority? And do not misunderstand: the question is for clarity about your claim, not about any claim of mine. — tim wood
And it's you who adds the "then its ok! Who am I to judge?" I have only argued that her first hurdle is to want; any further requirement at that point is invasive. — tim wood
You may answer that in the UK Parliament decides, end of discussion, and that would be it so far as law is is concerned, but it would still leave the why. And just blunt authority is an exercise of power, not of moral guidance. — tim wood
Qualify? Certainly not. — tim wood
And you need to qualify for an abortion too. — S
Yes, as a matter of law. — tim wood
Look, let's not exhaust ourselves on outlier oddities. In the main, a woman wants to terminate her pregnancy. She goes to her doctor. "Yep," he says, "you're pregnant." He goes on to advise her as to her being a candidate for the procedure in question. He may refer her for counseling both before and after - or not. I think it best if she is well-informed. He may advise her as to what her local laws have to say about it all. If you call this qualification, then I fault you on usage. On the other hand it seems you would have her and her case be reviewed y some kind of tribunal, to see if she qualified. If that's accurate, the same questions: who? why" what authority?
Now, I would prefer it if you gave some thought to your replies. It seems to me you're just in knee-jerk reaction mode. Why don't you try reasoning it through and skipping all the predigested cant you've been fed and apparently swallowed. The initial question of the OP is still unanswered, and it seems to me you've gone to much trouble to avoid it. Give it a try. — tim wood
Im sorry sir, but you are. The use of “consent” is being misapplied in direct service to you making the argument that taking on risk includes consent. It doesnt. This is the framing that im talking about, the structure (via misapplying the word “consent”) you are using to make your argument. It services your stance in abortion, but the framing is erroneous therefore it does not support your stance the way you think it does. — DingoJones
Why are you quoting this? Are we talking about the law, or the morality? I was under the impression its the latter you are concerned with, but you go on to insert more legal factors about doctors and consent forms...you are missing the point about the doctor example, and just muddying the waters.
Intentional or not, you are obfuscating here. — DingoJones
Im sorry sir but this illustrates profound confusion. Please notice that you didnt mention consent at all in that, not even your previous, incorrect use of the term. Im not trying to be rude, but you havent flipped the logic at all. You have merely sidestepped and then tried to drag me down an alleyway with you. Your use of my example fails, as the robber is not assuming the risk of an innocent person coming down the street. Thats not risk, that is the whole point of the robbers plans of robbing. Its his hope that someone comes by for him to rob. So I think you’ve jumbled things up a bit here, as I mentioned before you are mis-using the term consent here and from that basis you have become confused. You said you understand but I cannot see how that's possible given your response. — DingoJones
no worries - we disagree. On to the next — Rank Amateur
actually what I argued was. by her action of free will, she was responsible for the possible outcomes of that action. So to put back in your example. Between the mother and the fetus, the only one who made an act of free will was the mother. The fetus was the innocent. It was just becoming a fetus. Like your innocent person just walking down the block.
And yes, i completely agree with your concept of bodily autonomy - that is the nature of the question - does sex imply consent to the possible outcome. Obvioulsy the world right now says no. And it could be right, but i don't think the question is without merit. — Rank Amateur
are you trying to say that the woman was not fully aware that sex can cause pregnancy? That last sentence of yours, at least as i see it now, makes no sense at all. — Rank Amateur
why ?? — Rank Amateur
No. You are wrong and im explaining why. — DingoJones
Because the parents are the ones most closely associated to the creation of the child. Given that a child has certain material needs in order to develop, who else is supposed to shoulder this burden if not the parents? — Echarmion
and the difference between that and, the taking care of the material needs before birth ? Again, an assumption of the argument is the fetus is a moral entity. — Rank Amateur
Except that it isn't in some cases. It's not morally justified in any case where the pregnant woman is consciously aware of pursuing an abortion on an immoral basis. — S
What is an immoral basis for pursuing an abortion? If you have already discussed that, I might have overlooked it, the thread is long. — Echarmion
Except that it isn't in some cases. It's not morally justified in any case where the pregnant woman is consciously aware of pursuing an abortion on an immoral basis. Cases where the continuance of the pregnancy would not involve risk, greater than if the pregnancy were terminated, of injury to the physical or mental health of the pregnant woman or any existing children of her family. For example, she's simply changed her mind in the kind of way that she changed her mind about those shoes she bought last month.
The same can be said of the pro-choice who accuse the pro-life of dictating what women can do with their bodies. Do we not all admonish pregnant women who smoke, drink alcohol, or eat rare steak?
And in admonishing pregnant women who smoke, drink alcohol, or eat rare steak, are we not precisely considering the future potential of the foetus? — Michael
Where are you getting this moral justification? You presume it, but it is not a given!It's not morally justified — S
Well I can be thick and dense. If this was clear before I failed to register it and I apologize. This at the least is crystal clear.That's a poorly considered question that I've answered multiple times now. Stop mindlessly re-asking it, please. The obvious answer again: mine! — S
because ??? — Rank Amateur
To my way of thinking the only reasonable place to start, at least from this direction. But in this you have the law establishing morality. I'm inclined to think that morality is primordial, with respect to law. And would you accept that it must be? Else it's for you to reconcile laws that are mutually contrary and even contradictory.I judge the conditions for determining the morality of getting an abortion to match the conditions for determining the legality of getting an abortion. — S
The name of the concept is "implied consent" — Rank Amateur
Where are you getting this moral justification? You presume it, but it is not a given! — tim wood
Well I can be thick and dense. If this was clear before I failed to register it and I apologize. This at the least is crystal clear.
But whither now? If it's just your beliefs, then you're entitled and that's an end of it. And it follows that if they're just your beliefs, and you mean to safe-harbour them as such, then the right thing to do is withdraw them from the agon entirely. To hold them as beliefs and use them as premises in an argument handicaps all. You won't weigh the argument aright, and the rest of us will assail error without result. "What?!" you say, "there is no error!" And you would be correct, in beliefs held as beliefs, there is no error. But as argument those same beliefs may even be completely rotten. — tim wood
Financial interests don't have the same moral weight as the integrity of life and limb. — Echarmion
To my way of thinking the only reasonable place to start, at least from this direction. But in this you have the law establishing morality. I'm inclined to think that morality is primordial, with respect to law. And would you accept that it must be? Else it's for you to reconcile laws that are mutually contrary and even contradictory. — tim wood
In general we follow those with support, so the person you are talking to can address it. — Rank Amateur
And as a reminder, the necessary base assumption for the sake of argument is the fetus is a moral entity. It is a conflict of claims on bodily autonomy in this argument.
If you don't want to participate in that line of logic because you can't grand the concession for sake of the argument, I am 100% fine with that.
So, back to the argument if, as you say you are the parents have an obligation to the child by nature of the act of having sex, why does that obligation not extend pre birth, again, for the sake of this argument the fetus is something with moral standing. — Rank Amateur
Thank you for elaborating. Would I mischaracterise your position if I summed it up as: A mother has a moral obligation to carry a child to term, unless doing so entails an significant net risk (as compared to termination of the pregnancy)?
I leave the details of what significant risks are out because it's not related to my follow up question. If you don't disagree with my summary, my question is this: Where does this obligation come from? And to whom is the mother obligated? — Echarmion
What's an obligation? I tend not to find much use for that word. Is it that she should behave in a certain way: a way which I judge to be moral? It comes from me and my emotions and my reasoning, which forms a judgement. If I'm right, which naturally I think I am, then naturally I think that she should act in accordance with what I judge to be right. She's obligated to act in accordance with what I judge to be right, I suppose you could say. — S
An obligation means you should behave a certain way, yes. I use the term to signify that the mother should behave that way regardless of her personal feelings on the matter. I am aware that the judgement comes "from your reasoning", but what is that reasoning? If you reasoned there must be reasons, and I'd like to know what they are. — Echarmion
Because the obligation is not absolute or all encompassing. There is an obligation to support the child, but that obligation does not extend to your bodily integrity. You have asked why, before, and my answer would be that your body is the only connection to the outside world you, as a consciousness, have, and is therefore central to your freedom. As such, it is strongly protected. — Echarmion
I've already given them, haven't I? — S
So, in some type of summary, To the question I proposed, although you seem to believe in the concept of an implied consent, you point is it does not apply to pre birth, because it seems your view is bodily integrity is a stronger claim. — Rank Amateur
A thought experiment:
Imagine there's a building marked for demolition and all preparations are complete. Just before the teamleader presses the detonator someone comes running and screams ''there may be somebody inside the building!''.
What does a normal person do?
I would stop the demolition and send a search time inside the building to ensure it's empty of occupants.
Isn't abortion just like this situation? We don't know if a person is inside the fetus or not. What is the right thing to do? — TheMadFool
Not that I can see, or are you saying you gave them earlier in the thread? — Echarmion
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