Examlex
Don Marquis: An Argument That Abortion Is Wrong
Marquis begins by arguing that the abortion debate has reached a standoff, and that the standard arguments on both sides have insurmountable problems. Opponents of abortion usually argue that all human beings have a right to life and the fetus is a human being, so the fetus has a right to life. Marquis objects that cancer-cell cultures are biologically human, but do not have a right to life. On the other hand, those who believe abortion is morally permissible often claim that only persons have a right to life and the fetus is not a person, so the fetus does not have a right to life. Marquis objects to this argument as well, on the grounds that infants and the severely retarded do not seem to be persons in the relevant sense, but clearly have a right to life. This suggests that a different approach to the abortion debate is needed.
Marquis proceeds by asking what it is that makes killing normal adult human beings wrong. Killing is wrong, Marquis maintains, because it deprives the victim of a valuable future. That is, killing someone is wrong if it deprives her of a "future like ours" (FLO). This account is supported by four considerations: It fits with our considered judgment about the nature of the misfortune of death, it explains why murder is the worst of crimes, it coheres with our judgments about cases, and it is analogous to a persuasive argument for the wrongness of animal cruelty. If one accepts the FLO account of the wrongness of killing, one must conclude that abortion is presumptively wrong, because (in most cases) abortion deprives the fetus of a future like ours. Marquis closes by replying to the objection that his view entails that contraception is immoral.
-According to Marquis, contractarians cannot account for our obligations to animals.
Pr
An abbreviated term that could stand for various things, without additional context, its specific meaning is unclear. NO.
Phytochrome
A photoreceptor protein in plants that regulates growth, development, and flowering in response to light.
Photoperiodism
The physiological response (such as flowering) of plants to variations in the length of daylight and darkness.
Phytochrome
A light-detecting pigment found in plants that regulates various developmental processes by responding to red and far-red light.
Q1: The problem of temporal asymmetry was pointed
Q4: According to Foot, it is generally supposed
Q7: Why can Huckleberry Finn's actions toward Jim
Q11: According to Marquis, conscious awareness is a
Q12: Thomson argues that the following fact explains
Q18: What is moral luck? Why didn't Kant
Q26: According to Arpaly, it is possible to
Q27: According to Harman, whether an object is
Q28: According to Nagel, it is commonly believed
Q32: Because it puts people in general at