That's like saying that stabbing someone to death isn't murder because the knifeman should be allowed to have control over his own body.
No. The ability to control one's own body ends
outside of one's body.
This is emblematic of the inability of your side to acknowledge basic facts and logic. "reasonable" does have a legal definition, and I just gave it to you. Either that, or all my college law profs were lying to me and giving me test questions about made up material. Again we see the heart of the problem: being at odds at the facts. Whether willful or unwitting, it is ignorance that causes these types of conclusions.
I haven't taken any law classes, but I'll take your word for it. However, if you have taken law classes, you should know that abortion is not legally "murder".
My argument is perfectly logical.
If murder is the intentional killing of an innocent person
and a fetus is a person
then killing a fetus is murder
It's very simple, really. Conditional statements are logical operators. Thus, they are logical.
But an unborn human isn't a legal person, and murder is a legal crime. Since unborn humans don't meet the legal requirements of "person" and since abortion is legal, abortion is thus
not murder by the legal definition.
What's logical about saying ... "a woman has a right to control her body so she can [choose to abort her pregnancy]". That I do not see.
I took the emotionally charged bit out, to pretend like we are having a mature discussion.
Logically, I believe that all humans have the ethical right to control their own bodies. I see this right being used to decide legal battles (like
McFall v. Shimp). I would make the argument that it would then be unethical to deny control of one's body to any human. Thus, I feel that pregnant women retain their right to control their own bodies.
If this is so, if pregnant women
do have the right to control their own bodies, then I feel that this includes the right to deny use of one's body to any other human. I feel that this right, to control one's body, is not conditional upon why the other human needs use of one's body or what would happen to the other human if they did not get use of one's body.
So, to recap, I feel it is logical to say that pregnant women have the right to control their own bodies, and this includes the ability to deny use of one's body to any other human, regardless of what would happen to said human without use of one's body. Thus, I feel that elective abortion needs to be legal because it is the only immediate method availible to remove a non-viable unborn human from a pregnant woman's body. That abortion results in the death of the unborn human is sad, but there are no immediate alternatives that allow for immidiate removal of an unborn human but don't result in its death.
And, I would love to read a logical, not emotionally charged, counter to this.