Some would argue that they're not safe for the fœtus.I think the laws should be whatever the health professionals say are safe and what women want. Simple
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Some would argue that they're not safe for the fœtus.I think the laws should be whatever the health professionals say are safe and what women want. Simple
Reflective Self awareness develops in babies between 15-18 months of ageI believe ethical or moral obligation rests on personhood. Persons are self aware and have self-interest. They anticipate futurity and have an interest in continuing to exist. They're capable of happiness and pleasure, or pain and suffering.
I think the laws should be whatever the health professionals say are safe and what women want. Simple
I'm not comfortable terminating any babies.Reflective Self awareness develops in babies between 15-18 months of age
Source: “So Big”: The Development of Body Self-awareness in Toddlers - PMC).
Are you comfortable with terminating a 14 month old baby as a non-person with social justification?
Good, that means your criteria needs amendment in my viewI'm not comfortable terminating any babies.
OK. I'm open to suggestions.Good, that means your criteria needs amendment in my view
Of your listed criteria the only one I know of that doesn't apply to after birth is the ability to feel pain. Since this applies from 22-24 weeks after conception it would appear to make painting a target criteria around the arrow of birth exceedingly difficult in my view.OK. I'm open to suggestions.
I'm not advocating birth as the point of status change. I was fine with the regulations we had previous to the recent Supreme Court overturn of Roe vs Wade.Of your listed criteria the only one I know of that doesn't apply to after birth is the ability to feel pain. Since this applies from 22-24 weeks after conception it would appear to make painting a target criteria around the arrow of birth exceedingly difficult in my view.
But unless you dismiss the fœtus' personhood, its bodily autonomy must be taken into account, along with the mothers'.My suggested fix is in weighing the right of the mother to bodily autonomy in accordance with the agreement of society if you want to weigh the bodily autonomy more heavily than the right of foetal pain avoidance ok, but in weighing it - do not assign foetal pain avoidance a weight of zero.
That would be great -- but the pro-lifers usually block anything that might decrease the need for abortion. They block reproductive education, access to contraception, library books touching on sex, and generally try to sweep the whole subject under the rug.Instead assign it some small weight such that there would be a preference to arrange society such that post 22 week abortion becomes unnecessary to the extent possible.
What this would then entail in my view is having mechanisms in place such as childcare subsidy such that a mother need not condemn herself to 18 years off learning and financial development if she makes an informed decision to give birth.
In Australia according to my understanding we have maternity leave so that a woman can give birth then return to work after about 6 months so she would not be 18 years unemployed if she chooses to have a child, so if one could resume work after 6 months surely with appropriate support a woman could return to study after a suitable period (which is probably about 6 months to 1 year). In such a case there is no 18 year ramification.
Additionally access to family planning and associated education should be provided (I think Australia does ok on this front) so that women who don't desire it should not be permanently baby making machines.
Most (Medical experts) would argue that it is safe.Some would argue that they're not safe for the fœtus.
Of your listed criteria the only one I know of that doesn't apply to after birth is the ability to feel pain. Since this applies from 22-24 weeks after conception it would appear to make painting a target criteria around the arrow of birth exceedingly difficult in my view.
My suggested fix is in weighing the right of the mother to bodily autonomy in accordance with the agreement of society if you want to weigh the bodily autonomy more heavily than the right of foetal pain avoidance ok, but in weighing it - do not assign foetal pain avoidance a weight of zero.
Instead assign it some small weight such that there would be a preference to arrange society such that post 22 week abortion becomes unnecessary to the extent possible.
What this would then entail in my view is having mechanisms in place such as childcare subsidy such that a mother need not condemn herself to 18 years off learning and financial development if she makes an informed decision to give birth.
In Australia according to my understanding we have maternity leave so that a woman can give birth then return to work after about 6 months so she would not be 18 years unemployed if she chooses to have a child, so if one could resume work after 6 months surely with appropriate support a woman could return to study after a suitable period (which is probably about 6 months to 1 year). In such a case there is no 18 year ramification.
Additionally access to family planning and associated education should be provided (I think Australia does ok on this front) so that women who don't desire it should not be permanently baby making machines.
Of your listed criteria the only one I know of that doesn't apply to after birth is the ability to feel pain. Since this applies from 22-24 weeks after conception it would appear to make painting a target criteria around the arrow of birth exceedingly difficult in my view.
My suggested fix is in weighing the right of the mother to bodily autonomy in accordance with the agreement of society if you want to weigh the bodily autonomy more heavily than the right of foetal pain avoidance ok, but in weighing it - do not assign foetal pain avoidance a weight of zero.
Instead assign it some small weight such that there would be a preference to arrange society such that post 22 week abortion becomes unnecessary to the extent possible.
What this would then entail in my view is having mechanisms in place such as childcare subsidy such that a mother need not condemn herself to 18 years off learning and financial development if she makes an informed decision to give birth.
In Australia according to my understanding we have maternity leave so that a woman can give birth then return to work after about 6 months so she would not be 18 years unemployed if she chooses to have a child, so if one could resume work after 6 months surely with appropriate support a woman could return to study after a suitable period (which is probably about 6 months to 1 year). In such a case there is no 18 year ramification.
Additionally access to family planning and associated education should be provided (I think Australia does ok on this front) so that women who don't desire it should not be permanently baby making machines.
OkI note you draw the line at 22 weeks due to the potential for the fetus to feel pain, which is fair enough.
How so?The argument that a woman could reconsider termination at 22 weeks if the Australian government had a structure for social support is a bit of a long bow.
In my view that is reasonable to the extent that solid policy exists to provide for the care of the baby in the care of the mother if she wants it or to provide for another carer if she doesn't.I think if the government was to take responsibility for the fetus at 22 weeks, then we should be offering women the choice to carry the pregnancy to term and deliver the baby, hopefully to be adopted or cared for.
I do not know the answer to your question, but I think if anaesthesia were able to cease all suffering countries which provide the death penalty or which provide Euthanasia services would already anasthesatise the people undergoing them. Perhaps somone with more medical knowledge than me could answer if they do or not.If we want to allow terminations between 19-23 weeks and take pain into consideration, I wonder if the procedures can be performed under general anaesthesia such that the fetus does not feel pain?
How so?
I do not know the answer to your question, but I think if anaesthesia were able to cease all suffering countries which provide the death penalty or which provide Euthanasia services would already anasthesatise the people undergoing them. Perhaps somone with more medical knowledge than me could answer if they do or not.
Well I guess it all depends on what social services government can afford. If it could afford to care for all foetuses from the moment of conception then with few exceptions I'd say go for it.I agree your argument would encourage more women to carry a pregnancy, but I don't see how this would be relevant to 22 weeks.
Unless you are saying it is only socially disadvantaged women who seek termination at that point?
Well I guess it all depends on what social services government can afford. If it could afford to care for all foetuses from the moment of conception then with few exceptions I'd say go for it.
But at a more practical level I'd hazard a guess that government needs to weigh the needs of the pre-22 week foetuses against not only post-22 week foetuses but also against the needs of those people who are already born, and this is where some degree of cost-cutting may be a sad but needful necessity in my view.
Ok, so long as the government can afford the ones that require it I am supportive.The government doesn't need to care for all conceptions, only the ones that require it.
OkMy argument for 22 weeks is because it is 2 weeks shy of 24 weeks, which is the point when a premature baby can be viable.
None, but it does have potential costs which would eventuate if it were permitted to develop into a born child, so if a government can not afford to cover the costs/resources of those already born *and* those yet to be born it may make a kind of lesser of two evils sense to sacrifice those who only have potential to be born to save those who are already here in my view.I'm confused by what you are saying.
What costs does a fetus require that are currently not being met?
Also @GoodAttention please kindly note that I am not advised when you edit your posts, so if you edit them kindly put an "ETA" (Edited To Add) and make a following post drawing my attention to them or simply make a new post replying to me instead of adding edits to an old post *if* you wish me to respond to them.
Ok, so long as the government can afford the ones that require it I am supportive.
Ok
None, but it does have potential costs which would eventuate if it were permitted to develop into a born child, so if a government can not afford to cover the costs/resources of those already born *and* those yet to be born it may make a kind of lesser of two evils sense to sacrifice those who only have potential to be born to save those who are already here in my view.
But I must stress that in a scenario where there are enough resources to cover both the born and the unborn I'm supportive of trying to save all with few exceptions.
Abortion is safe for the fœtus?Most (Medical experts) would argue that it is safe.
The primary criterion is personhood. The fœtus has no self-awareness, cannot anticipate futurity, and thus has no self-interest.I note you draw the line at 22 weeks due to the potential for the fetus to feel pain, which is fair enough.
The argument that a woman could reconsider termination at 22 weeks if the Australian government had a structure for social support is a bit of a long bow.
I think if the government was to take responsibility for the fetus at 22 weeks, then we should be offering women the choice to carry the pregnancy to term and deliver the baby, hopefully to be adopted or cared for.
If we want to allow terminations between 19-23 weeks and take pain into consideration, I wonder if the procedures can be performed under general anaesthesia such that the fetus does not feel pain?