It's never enough for anything, to simply want it. — tim wood
The requirement for two doctors seems intrusive to me. — tim wood
Does UK law require such duplication in most things? — tim wood
Trolling, Fool? — tim wood
I mean by this that there are no a priori grounds for interfering with her on the basis of her wants. Or, in other words, it's none of your business. As argued in Roe v. Wade, at some point it may become your business, but the grounds for that are not, in my opinion, either radical, controversial, or in question. — tim wood
Tim says an abortion is like having a haircut, a woman's right to do whatever to her body. — TheMadFool
and the requirement of two is a safeguarding measure. Seems sensible to me. — S
The original context of this is someone's arguing that, yes, some abortion is ok if a woman needs one, as opposed to wanting one. I replied it's enough for her to want one. That is, her wanting is her business, and her acting on the basis of her wants is her business. There can be no justification for requiring her want to be a "need." If you think there is, please make you case.It's never enough for anything, to simply want it. — tim wood
t is not good philosophy because it makes absolutely no attempt to be good philosophy. Quite the contrary, Judge Blackmun states -
"We need not resolve the difficult question of when life begins. When those trained in the respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy, and theology are unable to arrive at any consensus, the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, is not in a position to speculate as to the answer." — Rank Amateur
The core underlying statement of fact in the decision, that allows the killing of the fetus, is the court does not really know when life begins, and they don't need to resolve it. — Rank Amateur
A pregnant woman wants to have an abortion. What if any are grounds for controlling as to whether or when or under what circumstances she may proceed? The grounds may be law or ethics.... And arguments should be just that, arguments and not merely rants or claims.
Can we do it? This is a philosophy site; let's do philosophy!
I start with the proposition that Roe v. Wade is a pretty good set of rules. — tim wood
Protecting what, from whom, on what justification? — tim wood
In all of this there is the deep presupposition that this interference is justified and necessary, that it all somehow, seemingly automatically and without question, just is "your" business. And it is not, on those terms. Or, folks who claim it is need to make their purposes and justifications clear, in clear and reasoned terms. To date there is much that is heartfelt - much more that is awful. Of course if it's just all just a matter of "seems to me," but that "just seems to me" is disingenuous. In short, taken as a whole, I hold the pro-life position to have nothing ethical or moral about it; rather it is a vicious and relentless attack on people and sense and reason. And people of good will and good faith who have their own reasons for opposing abortion for any reason of their own have got to realize that their arguments, such as they may be, are lost in pro-life rhetoric. — tim wood
The original context of this is someone's arguing that, yes, some abortion is ok if a woman needs one, as opposed to wanting one. I replied it's enough for her to want one. That is, her wanting is her business, and her acting on the basis of her wants is her business. There can be no justification for requiring her want to be a "need." If you think there is, please make you case. — tim wood
If you wanted a driver's license, no one would stop you and say you needed to "need" a license before proceeding. — tim wood
They would say that there are some hurdles to clear and hoops to jump through on your way to getting your license. She wants an abortion. Is that the end of the matter? Of course not. — tim wood
I think there's a fair argument to be made - but NO ONE has yet made it - that at some point in the pregnancy wanting by itself is maybe not enough... — tim wood
Back to the OP. What do you say are grounds for controlling as to abortion? No mere rants or claims, unless they be granted, just sound argument. — tim wood
Right, women in the UK are hazards to themselves (and doctors), and single doctors cannot be trusted. Is that your position? Is that it? Protect them from themselves because they can neither act in their own interest nor protect themselves? Or is it from someone or something else?Protecting what, from whom, on what justification?
— tim wood
Sigh. Do you really have to ask? To protect the interests of both the patient and the doctor. — S
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.If you were a doctor or working in the legal department of a hospital, would you really argue against this? — S
What I say is that if she wants one, that's enough justification for her to pursue one. 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.You need to look deeper into the wants to reach a sensible moral judgement. You can't just say "If she wants an abortion, then it's okay! Who am I to judge?". — S
It must be the debate in the UK is very much more civil than in the US. For the US my language is correct and accurate. It properly characterizes the sidewalk confrontations and the efforts of unprincipled lawmakers.The above is just uncharitable characterisation, ad hominems, loaded language... "awful", "disingenuous", "viscious", "relentless attack"... Give me a break. — S
Qualify? Certainly not. 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?By your own admission, they would still have to qualify or "clear the hurdles". — S
And you need to qualify for an abortion too. There are conditions you're required to meet which I've quoted and referenced. These requirements are there for a reason. It's neither morally justified nor within the confines of the law for people to do whatever they want, whether we're talking about driving a car or getting an abortion. — S
Something bad about me? I'm expressing a point of view here. I'm not against women or abortion. It's just that I feel women have the power to give life and this shouldn't be ignored for the sake of ''freedom''. What kind of freedom is this anyway? To be free to commit what is possibly muder - that's not worth fighting for is it? I'd rather fight for equal treatment at work, in politics, etc.No, he didn't. This tells us about you, not Tim. — Banno
I say it's none of your business. You say that's a moot point. Ok, it is your business. How? Why? On what authority? To what end?
To be precise, how, exactly, is it your business? — tim wood
Ok, you're concerned with a social issue. What social issue is that, exactly?To be precise, how, exactly, is it your business?
— tim wood
Isn't abortion a social issue? Social issues are everybody's business, no? — TheMadFool
It's nice you're concerned. But women can handle it - in any case, not your business.I understand the process of pregnancy is quite tough for a woman.
Very sensitive of you. But not your business.Carrying a baby for 9 months, delivering it, taking care of it, is no easy job.
Isn't this a question for the woman to answer? In any case, Not. Your. Business. Remember above? Your business, that you have chosen for yourself, is a social issue, as yet not well-articulated, at least here.I see it as power - to be the cradle of life. Do women want to give up this power for the sake of something so petty as the right to abortion which is a denial of what is woman's essence?
get therapy — tim wood
Right, women in the UK are hazards to themselves (and doctors), and single doctors cannot be trusted. Is that your position? Is that it? Protect them from themselves because they can neither act in their own interest nor protect themselves? Or is it from someone or something else? — tim wood
You did not answer this. I don't question UK law, but I can question the why of it. If it's standard practice, then that's how it is. If it isn't then why just for abortion? The answer you did give:the requirement for two doctors; is that a standard practice for medical procedures in the UK? — tim wood
is a non-sequitur. In this case an evasion of the point of the question.Right, here in the UK, you never get any pregnant women who are in any way vulnerable or at any risk whatsoever to themselves or by putting doctors at risk, and a single doctor can always be trusted completely, without giving it a second thought, and a single doctor is at no risk whatsoever for anything in anyway if the patient decides to take legal action against the doctor or the hospital. In fact, there is no such thing as health risks or legal risks here in the UK. You only get those in other countries. Would you believe it, we're risk free. We should therefore immediately scrap any kind of safeguarding in relation to these nonexistent risks. What were we thinking? — S
A woman wants to terminate her pregnancy. What if any are grounds for controlling as to whether or when or under what circumstances she may proceed? — tim wood
Thank you! It is exactly what I am trying to do though not one myself. Where else would reason have us start? Why do you not start there?You're seeing this from a woman's point of view and also in the very narrow sense of rights. — TheMadFool
I would say limits in the sense of boundaries, not necessarily leasts. But I think you just wrote -- i can read it right there - that the right to abortion is a minimum of freedom. That seems a bit radical. If you mean the right to want one and to think about it and to investigate the matter in an open manner unconstrained by arbitrary, invasive, irrelevant and even irrational laws, then I agree.Rights are, by definition, formulated in terms of leasts. Every right, including the right of a woman you're so enthusiastically advocating, is minimum of freedom. — TheMadFool
Yes, you're writing about you and your own peculiar notions. But it's not about you, is it.I, on the other hand, am talking of a woman's true worth. It goes beyond rights - even slaves had rights. A woman's power lies in her womb and what it can do and not what can be done to it. — TheMadFool
Very few women think in my terms, but enough of my personal problems. Why do you add the clause, "if there are no alternatives"?Also, I have a feeling that women don't think in your terms. They're not fighting the pro-lifers to do anything they want. They simply want abortion to be available to them in case there are no alternatives. — TheMadFool
Unsupported claim. Support it or dismiss it. And please turn on your nonsense filter. I know - I have trouble with that myself. But to write that abortion is a minimum freedom of women, and then write that the "whole issue" is a source of confusion because of a wrong "association with women's rights or emancipation" is just nonsense. Let me be clear about that; it's no-sense. Trouble is, it's not innocent no-sense. Why are you adducing nonsense? And does it ever strike you as odd that there should be any issue about women's emancipation? If anywhere women are not free, why would you even think to block their aspirations for and movement to freedom? Especially "least" freedoms?It could also be that they're confused about the whole issue as it's been, unfortunately and erroneously, linked to women's rights or emancipation. This is an incorrect view. Women's rights and abortion are two unrelated issues linked together by the unscrupulous and narrow minded. — TheMadFool
Un-effing-believable. So much, so much, wrong with this.I say women can get equal rights and should fight for it but absolute freedom in abortion isn't an indication of that. In fact, it's to submit that they have an unwanted trait that they'd rather not have. What does that show? Nothing other than their tacit confession that they're the weaker sex and disliked by their own ilk. — TheMadFool
the requirement for two doctors; is that a standard practice for medical procedures in the UK?
— tim wood
You did not answer this. — tim wood
I don't question UK law, but I can question the why of it. If it's standard practice, then that's how it is. If it isn't then why just for abortion? The answer you did give is a non-sequitur. In this case an evasion of the point of the question. — tim wood
Is it the case that the topic of abortion turns sane, sensible people into fools at best and usually worse, Or does the topic just attract those who are already that way? Now I think you would do us both a favor and just answer succinctly the question of the OP. But can you? — tim wood
Go back to the OP and its simple question: a woman wants to terminate her pregnancy. What if any are grounds for controlling as to whether or when or under what circumstances she may proceed? Two or three or four simple sentences to answer. Do it, if you can. — tim wood
To use an absurd example: Walking down a dark street might entail a non-zero chance of being robbed, but I do not implicitly consent to that outcome just by taking the risk. — Echarmion
, I think. It's not that the father implicitly consented to paying child support in the event of a child being born. It's that society defers the financial burden created by the child on the person who is responsible for creating the risk in the first place. — Echarmion
↪tim wood ↪S ↪TheMadFool ↪Banno
Interested your guys view on the concept of Implied consent on the right of the fetus to the use of the woman's body.
the logic goes something like this:
People are responsible for the predictable consequences of their actions.
Pregnancy is predictable consequence of sex, birth control can very effectively reduce, but not eliminate that this consequence.
By freely entering into sex, where pregnancy is a predictable consequence, there is an implied consent that the fetus has a right to the use of the woman's body.
As an example: A woman decides to have a baby, against the wishes of the father. He doesn't want the baby. Baby comes, she sues him for child support - and in general wins. The reason being that the child was a result of his willful act, with a child as a possible consequence. — Rank Amateur
My response would be that the robbery is the action of another. You can't implicitly consent to someone else's action. — Rank Amateur
You are only framing it that way to support your position, but it doesn't make as much sense as you think it does. You are mis-usung the word consent in this instance. — DingoJones
My response would be that the robbery is the action of another. You can't implicitly consent to someone else's action. — 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
So there is some room for argument on granting or not granting that assumption. In the case o, for lack of a better word " accidents", - your robber, car driver etc" I would argue that assuming the risk, if needed it not a permission for the accident. I would not make the same case for sex. — Rank Amateur
Not sure I understand the difference i those 2 points, seems to be saying the exact same thing twice, using different words. What am I missing ? — Rank Amateur
No, if we are using the legal definitions of the term, at least approximately, then you can implicitly consent to someone elses actions. That's actually the main practical application of the notion of implied consent, for things like life-saving surgery. Given the way you framed your argument, it also seems to me you effectively consider the fetus another person. — Echarmion
I am not entirely sure what you are saying here, but consent and responsibility aren't correlated in the way you seem to imply. The responsibility of the person acting for the consequences of that action are unrelated to whether or not the person that is acted upon has consented. You can be responsible for moral or otherwise permissible actions, the question just doesn't usually come up. — Echarmion
Could you elaborate on why you would exclude an unwanted pregnancy from the list of "accidents"? — Echarmion
What I was trying to say is that there are different levels of justification necessary for the outcomes. In order for someone else to have "access" (to use a very general term) to your body, consent is necessary. In order to be held criminally accountable, you need to be guilty. In order to be asked to shoulder the financial burdens resulting from a risk, it can be sufficient that you are the person most closely associated with the risk, e.g. because you derived some kind of benefit from the action that caused the risk. Provided that there is no other actor who is more responsible.
The details will differ according to the specific laws, but here is another example: If you build a house, and an earthquake then damages the house to such an extend that it is a danger to the neighbors or passersby, you can be obligated to have the house torn down, at your expense. You did not consent to the earthquake and are not responsible for it, yet you still have to shoulder the costs because it's your house. — Echarmion
I think you are looking at this from the wrong point of view. In your example the robber is the woman and the fetus is innocent walking down the street. — Rank Amateur
because it does not require the deliberate of even accidental activity of a 3rd party. If the woman and man have sex, there is some probability - solely due to their actions alone - that they may become pregnant. — Rank Amateur
so after all that, should the Dad be required to pay child support ?? — Rank Amateur
That does not make sense to me. Your initial argument was that the mother implicitly consented to the use of her body by the fetus. That implies that you accept the notion of bodily autonomy, which holds that no other person has a right to use my body, or parts of it, without consent. Since the fetus is using the body of the mother, it is doing something that is not generally permissible, like the robber in my example. — Echarmion
You need to establish that the person in question, if they had been fully aware of all facts, would have consented. This is not the case for unwanted pregnancies just as it is not the case for car accidents. — Echarmion
so after all that, should the Dad be required to pay child support ??
— Rank Amateur
Yes. — Echarmion
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.