To be clear, you're saying it probably wouldn't be possible, right?
No, I'm saying the mother is the doctor's priority.
To be clear, you're saying it probably wouldn't be possible, right?
No, I'm saying the mother is the doctor's priority.
If so.....you've just nullified your analogy. The doctor's not the deciding factor.
If he does not act, both die.
If he acts, one lives.
Correct...though his specific action is determined by the circumstance presented to him...not the other way around.
I'll continue the claim of dissemblance as long as you continue to present your objection as not an intended default preclusion to the contitutional challenge of restricted liberty via reasonable, thorough examinations of both claim and counter-claim. What's not acceptable is doubling down against the liberties of women, by no less than autocratic rationale, obstructing the very process for its determination itself.
Rather, unconventional physical facts and circumstances blur the otherwise uncontested distinction. thus, we must respond accordingly. Not to rest our reasons upon convenient dissemblance.
Call me a liar again and I'm done with you on the point. Find your argumentative feet or simply stop talking to me. This is unacceptable.
This is true in both cases.
So you are pro-life, but you think abortion should remain legal?
Where did you get that idea?
Abortion is murder.
Not so. That would be the equivalent of claiming the lifeguard chose one swimmer over the other because one was closer or a better swimmer than the other.
That's precicely what your analogy was constructed against.
Again...
- Two lives are imperiled (due to circumstances independent of the rescuer).
- If the rescuer does not act, both lives are lost.
- If the rescuer acts, one life may be saved.
All of those statements are true for both cases.
Your gripe seems to be that swimming is not the same as being pregnant.
This is special pleading.
I'm saying the doctor's priority is always with the mother given the equivalent particulars of the swimmers...entirely unlike the lifeguard who situationally must pick at random.
Simply because that is the patient he must save first, otherwise he certainly loses both.
This fact does not logically imply a greater intrinsic value of the mother's life.
Though, 'value-added' need not infer equal value.Quite the opposite, in fact. The precedence of the effort to save the mother is due to the added value of the life of the unborn child. Treating the mother is the only way there can be a chance of saving both.
Anyway, who's to say the lifeguard chooses randomly? Might he not be justified in choosing to rescue the swimmer he judges to be the more likely to survive? If he attempts to rescue the swimmer that he thinks might die anyway, he risks losing both.
Though, 'value-added' need not infer equal value.
No, but it is sufficient cause for the seemingly preferential treatment of the mother.
Agreed. But your analogy claims one death. You agree that it must be the fetus?
Most times, sure. But not due to a greater intrinsic value of either life.
And if the unborn child is able to survive outside of the womb, the child may survive the mother's death, rather than the other way around.
It's just a matter of who the doctor can save, not who's more valuable. If he can save both, he will. Right?