The Moral Issue of Abortion My essay is about the argument over abortion, whether it is right or wrong for it to be carried out. Abortion is a very sensitive subject and there are many views for and against abortion, I choose to do the moral issue of abortion because I have no views for or against abortion. I wanted to know more and look into detail what abortion was and for what reasons do women have for choosing to abort their babies. In my view abortion is the termination of an unborn baby. Abortion is carried out if the developing is not wanted for some reason. There are different kinds of abortion. There is 'Spontaneous abortion' and 'Induced'. Spontaneous abortion or miscarriage is when …show more content…
Slippery slope: - Technology can now find out if the foetus has any defects eg) missing fingers. The argument over all this is where do we draw the line. Can someone just abort a baby that has only a couple of fingers missing? And what message are we sending out to members of society that are disabled. The information that was given to me showed both sides of the argument and was very useful to find out facts and figures about abortion in the UK. The information given to us was in very large quantities and I had to sort through a lot of irrelevant information and pick out the information that I needed. Most of the information I gained was through the Internet, 'Desperate choices' video, class worksheets and also a survey that I carried out to find out people's opinions. On the Internet it was hard to find the information that I needed. I found lots of sites with the for or against argument. I had to go on the sites and pick out the relevant information. Abortion is controversial because some people believe in the sanctity of life and they think that life was given to us so we should not take it away. And on the other hand some people believe that it is up to the mother to decide what it is best for her. There are different types of induced abortion. Abortion procedures change according to the gestation (stage) of the
There is a lot of controversy surrounding the issue of people’s autonomy when it comes to the end of their lives. Why somebody would want to end their life prematurely is a question that puzzles people. So therefore is hard to comprehend why people should have autonomy over such a thing.
right to decide to die. Some people don’t really want to commit suicide or they are at a point in
Suppose after trying to get pregnant for many years, it is found that the baby has Down syndrome, and the doctors suggest to abort the fetus. Although with a successful career a balancing it will need to be maintained. However, it is uncomfortable to accept those
Abortion has been and still is a very controversial topic. Many people debate whether abortion is an act of murder or an act of agency. Is a person pro-choice or pro-life? Abortion is no light subject. Chances are that people will always dispute its terms. Many believe that abortion is an answer to population control. Others believe that the earth will be able to sustain itself to provide for new life. To help decipher this moral dilemma, moral philosophies are examined. The two most profound moral philosophies used to study abortion are utilitarianism and deontology. Over the course of this paper, I will assess the subject of abortion in regards to population control, including its effects and address it in accordance with the theories of utilitarianism and deontology. I will explain the stances of each philosophy concerning abortion as a means to overpopulation. In conclusion, I will reevaluate the moral problem and restate the essence of what I discussed about the moral philosophies.
In my opinion, life should be a matter of choice and freedom, I think people should have the right to control what happens to
While many believe that life is a gift from God, and only God can take it, others demand that terminally ill patients should be able to decide their own destiny, and thus decide whether or not they had suffered enough. They argue that suffering, terminally ill patients should be allowed a legal access to medications hastening death, as the only mean to free themselves of pain unrelieved by palliative care. Today, the debate remains heated dividing conservatives and liberals, pro-life and pro-choice, and those who emphasize morality versus autonomy.
Abortion is a controversial issue in the United States. It seems impossible to have any accord or compromise on this topic because the views of different people are so widely divergent. These views are based on whether people decide that priority should be given to treating women as rational beings and allowing them the autonomy to get an abortion or to enabling the development of a possibly viable fetus.
I can make an argument all day about how abortions are morally wrong, but if I do not have a solution to the problem that I am arguing, then I am just being a bigot. A bigot is defined as some being narrow-minded towards an individual who has an opposing view. I truly believe that there are other solutions than continuing with the abortion procedure and that is giving the child up for adoption, teach more about safe sex, and last, set an early deadline on abortions.
Abortion is terminating a pregnancy before the fetus has been born. Abortion has been and still is very controversial and has had an increasing amount of cases all over the world. In 2000 there were over one million abortions in the United States (Harper, et al., 501). Abortion is one of the most common procedures women undergo. According to the current abortion rates about thirty percent of women will have an abortion by the age of forty-five (Jones and Kavanaugh, 2011). Most abortions are attributed to unplanned pregnancies. In 2001 half of the 6.4 million pregnancies were not planned and half of this number resulted in having an abortion (Jones and Kavanaugh, 2011). Abortion is one of the biggest aspects that healthcare faces. Although the view of abortion is very controversial, there are still many issues that people do not know about the problem.
result was the same as in the case of rape. I offer you the explanation that the
For years the question of abortion and the ethics behind it has been an important topic. At what point does a human really become a human and when it is acceptable to discard of them before they become human? What are the ethics behind abortion and do we as a society have a moral obligation to these potential humans? The definition of a human being is any individual of the genus Homo, especially a member of the species Homo sapiens. This is a generic definition for a very specific topic. What exactly classifies an organism as a human being? Do these potential humans have rights? All these questions and more have been racking the brains of people for years. We will cover all of these topics in this paper.
There has been a huge debate on whether or not we have the right to die. I believe we all have the right to choose to die, as a child and an adult. How we want to live and die is OUR choice. A numerous amount of individuals who are either sickly or going through a specific health issue know for certain that they will die, so they would much rather choose to die before letting their sickness have the power over killing them. For instance, there was a 4-year old girl that suffered with severe cancer and she told her family that she wanted to go to heaven. At such a young age, she already decided how she wanted to die because she no longer wanted to go through the pain that the cancer was causing her. Most parents were upset that they would give a child the right to die, but it was
The meaning of the word ethical is related to moral principles or the branch of knowledge dealing with these. And an ethical issue is “a problem or situation that requires a person or organization to choose between alternatives that must be evaluated as right (ethical) or wrong (unethical).” And abortion is an ethical issue. Last year in New Zealand 14,073 abortions were performed. 14 thousand potential lives were killed before they were even given a chance to live. “Abortion means ending a pregnancy before the fetus (unborn child) can live independently outside the mother.” This is an ethical issue because it goes against many things that people’s values originate from for example, the bible, a person’s morals and the human rights act, a religious sacrament etc. and therefore people tend to get quite offended when something they so strongly believe in is being abused, for example the bible, where their religious belief is that every human being is made from God’s image and likeness. There are a lot of different responses to abortion and ones I will be discussing is the bible and Catholic/Christian church, Pope Francis’ view, New Zealand law and organizations helping out.
Do people have a right to die? When I read this question I think of it as asking can people end their own lives, or can people assist others in ending their own lives, before it naturally occurs? Some people may not consider this a serious topic and simply say yes. Why should I worry about someone else if they are not harming me or anyone else? Others take into consideration that this is a human life and soul. Life is a precious gift given to us by God and we are to protect it.
While the idea that a fetus is a person or, at least, warrants moral consideration is held by plenty-- this view is largely tied to our inherent emotional feelings about human babies, and has little to no logical standing. Those who ascribe to the belief that a fetus has full moral status by virtue of the fact that it will be a human or that it contains human DNA are negligent of the very characteristics that establish humans as moral patients to begin with. Operating on the definition provided by Mary Anne Warren in “On the Moral Status of Abortion,” the traits that ‘very roughly’ central to the concept of personhood are self-consciousness, reasoning, self-motivated activity, capacity to communicate, and the presence of self-concepts (par 30). A fetus does not possess these characteristics, is not truly a person in the psychological sense and therefore does not warrant moral consideration. The perpetuated belief that a fetus does have moral status has largely operated on either one or both of these logical fallacies: that life begins at conception and that abortion is murder.