(A) fetus? (B) infant (C) suicidal teen (D) temporarily comatose adult (E) other living human adults (e.g. majority of people around us)
In (B)-(E), killing is clearly wrong; (A) is in dispute. What's the explanation for (B)-(E)? Does it cover (A) as well?
Don Marquis (born 1935) is an American philosopher whose main academic interests are in ethics and medical ethics. Marquis is currently Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at the University of Kansas… Marquis is best known for his paper “Why Abortion Is Immoral”, which appeared in The Journal of Philosophy in April, 1989. This paper has been reprinted over 80 times, and is widely cited in the philosophical debate over abortion. The main argument in the paper is sometimes known as the “deprivation argument”, since a central premise is that abortion deprives an embryo or fetus of a 'future like ours'“.
Note: any counterargument needs to be equally intelligible and have a different ethic on abortion
FLO doesn’t have a religious basis, doesn’t rely on ‘speciesism’
FLO doesn't seem to answer enough q's e.g. why are cannibalism or necrophilia wrong? Or sexually assaulting a permanently comatose person? Premise of human dignity answers those Q's
Blaise: “I use it in a rough way often - like every month or two? - when trying to get at why killing is wrong in general. Like, once in particular at George Brown Casa Loma, I think it helped get through to one guy as a complement to the HRA. I'm not using the argument in detail, but taking his/Kaczor's guidance to inform some of the questions I'm asking.
Matthew B: I can't recall a vivd memory of using that argument. But, when people are very set on very specifc life experiences that make life meaningful… Then reminding them that abortion completely denies a very young human person of those meaningful life experiences, could be effective in illustrating a serious injustice? Especially when we know that this child should grow and develop and have extraordinarily meaningful life experiences
Katie: Yes, what Matthew said! When I’m arguing the difference between wrongness of killing born vs preborn, I point out that it’s not the fact that someone had a past and past life experiences that makes killing wrong - it’s that you’re depriving them of all future experiences. It hurts the families of the born more, yes, but as far as why we shouldn’t kill, it’s because we are robbing someone’s future, and that is true of born and preborn alike.
similar argument made by A. Pruss https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=R9dGgHqEt2M&t=70s
decent video/animation overview of argument https://youtu.be/UHYWu6UWEe0?si=h46B9-eLoDgPfHdD