Selix
Lord Nagafen Raider
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I would not be so sure in that assumption. We are including people who would like to outlaw all abortions even those that endanger the mothers life. These are the same people who would keep a corticalliy dead person of life support forever for religious reasons and have the highest moral authority to do so. (In their own opinion)If the baby doesn't have a working cortex, then I don't think anyone would morally repulsed if the mom had anabortion. Again, morality is based on what is known at the time a decision is made. You can add hypothetical developmental anomalies, but the main topic isabortionwhen you know that there's currently nothing wrong with the zygote / fetus.
But to assess your central point what is known by a mother at the time of a zygoteabortionis that something which has the potential to be a baby was aborted. That at the time ofabortionthere was no certianty (except what the mother believes) as to wether or not that zygote would become a human life.
There is the bad assumption in this that you somehow know enough at the zygote stage for it to be a human life or even worse you assume a zygote is a human life without proving that it is possible.What does a fetus having the ability to be "viable on its own" have to do with life being taken duringabortion?
Both assumptions place the burden of your morality on the mother without solid proof.
Edit: I make a logical assumption about what is a human life here. While I avoid defining all aspects of what is required to call something a human life I will instead say that a human life must at a minnimum contain a working cortex. This being the most basic absolute I could find that is also 100% of the time always true.
Note that I grant you would be on solid ground statistically speaking but that's statistics not morality.