Fluffy said:
Yes it is consistent even in the form that you present (although I am unsure what you mean by "partially born").
Both abortion and capitol punishment are not okay. However, since we have do not have what I consider to be a viable alternative for abortion but we do have one for capital punishment, the former is permissable until that condition is met whilst the latter might have been in the past but is no longer.
fluffy, I really do not think it's legitimate to compare abortion and capital punishment. I reject the very premise of the thread. Yes, it is the case that in both instances we're talking about whether someone has the right to life - a right that is usually unquestioned in society. But that's where the similarity ends.
In the case of abortion, the question of a right to life is based on the question of personhood. Does a foetus count as a person? Therefore, the issue of whether or not the foetus is "innocent" is absolutely irrelevant, and inserting it in the OP simply distracts attention away from the real question - is a foetus a person?
In the case of capital punishment, there is no question as to whether the convicted is a person or not. If not, then it would not make any sense to try to hold the person responsible for his/her actions. Instead, the question is whether or not, once someone is a person, that person can do something so horrendous so as to lose his/her right to life.
It is a separate moral issue from the abortion issue.
Imo, no one can
do anything so horrendous so as to lose their inherent right to life as a human being. I am against capital punishment
on principle. It's not a matter of whether there is a viable alternative. (Since when has there not been an alternative to capital punishment?)
And as I've stated before, I do value the foetus because it is a
potential person, but
not at the expense of the mother who is already a person. In this case, the question of whether there are alternatives is relevant. Because if there were an alternative solution where the foetus could continue its existence into a full-fledge person, but not at the mother's expense, then I would support the right of the foetus to live.