So do you fall into the camp that doesn’t allow for any violations to bodily autonomy?
That bit didn't actually occur to me as a viable objection. That's a good one.
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So do you fall into the camp that doesn’t allow for any violations to bodily autonomy?
Abortion is a denial of who you are when it comes to a reason for you existing as a mechanism in reality.
Someone’s reason to live is personal, not objective. So your opinion isn’t something that anyone needs to accept for themselves.
The purpose of biological mechanisms in us is not a matter of subjective opinion, hence I'm not talking about the some vacuous idea about one's life purpose.
There's a biological reason why women ovulate and menstruate or why men [bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse] sperm, and it had nothing to do with one's subjective opinion on the matter. Likewise there's a biological reason why women get pregnant, and again it has nothing to do with one's subjective opinion of one's life purpose when it comes to immediate context as to why such mechanism is there.
There is nothing subjective about these mechanisms and why people want to have sex. We may overlay some romantic layer of stories as to why, but these are merely icing on the cake of raw biological drives that are there for a rather specific reason, which again has nothing to do with our subjective opinion about it.
And the violinist argument relies on the fact that you have no emotional attachment to the violinist, and aren’t responsible for his condition. Which makes it a terrible analogy for abortion.
So my question to you is, do you save your child or let them die?
As with the violinist argument...
All “arguments” not based on objective facts are opinions. And there isn’t any objective facts to bodily autonomy issues. We can’t prove any inherent right to body autonomy. We just feel like we should have it. Some people then conflate that feeling to the point where they couldn’t accept any situation where bodily autonomy is violated. To me, that’s a more emotional position than one that allows for certain violations.
You need to offer positions that work with the audience. Someone who believes an abortion kills a woman’s baby typically won’t be swayed by someone’s opinion regarding the sanctity of bodily autonomy, because they typically see the validity of the exception.
So do you fall into the camp that doesn’t allow for any violations to bodily autonomy?
Do you think anyone should care if they’re not fulfilling a biological “purpose”? What objective reason do we have to care?
I've been on this site forever. I know how this discussion is going to go...
I don't believe a cluster of cells is a person.
I can not think of any real situation where I would support abrogating bodily autonomy. Nor can I think of any real life situation where the law would require that we allow it.
Nope. It actually works. The person who stole your kidney in the analogy are the circumstances that got you pregnant.
So, essentially it would be you and your sexual partner.
A baby did not just jump inside of you and took residence. It's a part of the mechanism that you initiated. If you press a button on a microwave does it steal electricity from your house?
At what point does it become a person in you opinion and what criteria do you use to determine what is a person and what is not?
And by not getting pregnant each month, I have killed an egg,
and when my husband doesn't make sure that each of the sperm he produces fertilizes an egg, he is killing between 20 million and 100 million each time he, uh, well, you know.
You gonna yell at me for those deaths as well?
Totally irrelevant. It is a fertilized seed. That is all you need to know.
Does this Sound familiar my treasure?
How is he killing them?![]()
Except I can take action against such circumstances. In your analogy I was not given a choice.
Would bodily integrity argument take priority in a case where somebody is causing a harm to another?
So if you manage your body in a way that ends up stabbing me with a knife, it obviously annuls any bodily integrity argument.
I know you are not arguing that one can do that without consequences, I'm curious as to why you think there are no limits to that principle?
You obviously don't get to pump your body full of drugs,
or get to roam around in case of Insanity.
I don't think there is any single point where you can say, "It's not a person, not a person, not a person.... AND now it IS a person."
This might help you understand my position on it... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sorites_paradox
It is less that I think there are no limits and more I am unable to think of any case where limits should be applied. If I could think of a logical case to impose limits I would not be opposed to it.
Know of any laws against drinking yourself to death? Me either. You can
This is not bodily autonomy it is personal liberty and is a slightly different case.
So destroying a fertilized seed in a woman's uterus is wrong, but if that fertilized seed is an acorn, then it's fine and dandy?
I do not have children but I'm going to guess if I did I would violate any law or norm to save them.
Many morals we hold to are opinion. "We should not kill each other" is likewise an opinion. That does not mean we do not have strong reasoning to support the opinion.
Which is why I think the bodily autonomy argument is a decent argument. It points out that in no other application (barring highly unlikely hypothetical scenarios) do we presume that a person is required to support the life of another at the expense of themselves.
I can not think of any real situation where I would support abrogating bodily autonomy. Nor can I think of any real life situation where the law would require that we allow it.
If no one cared then you wouldn't be here. Isn't that obvious? It's a self-negating proposition.