Relating To Foetal Persons: Why Women’S Voices Come First And Last, But Not Alone In Abortion Debates
Abstract
Abortion remains a controversial topic, with pro-life and pro-choice advocates clashing fiercely. However, public polling
demonstrates that the vast majority of the Western public holds a middle position: being in favour of abortion but not in
all circumstances nor at any time. The intuitions held by the majority seem to imply a contradiction: two early foetuses at
the same point in development have different moral statuses. Providing coherent philosophical grounding for this intuition
has proved challenging. Solutions given by philosophers such as Feinberg, Harman and Räsänen are complex and do not
fully account for the lived experience of pregnancy loss. This article argues for a relational ontological construction of
human personhood as the basis of foetal personhood. This approach takes seriously the literature of pregnancy loss and
the lived experiences of pregnant persons. Focusing on the manner in which persons relate to early foetuses (especially
pregnant persons), provides a coherent ground for distinct foetal value. Importantly, this approach is both simple and
intuitive. Therefore, it can be more easily adopted by middle. To counter an implied equality of human relationality, the
article argues for a clear hierarchy based on relational proximity that affirms pregnant persons? primary role in deciding
the moral significance of foetal termination.
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