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Summary Of A Defense Of Abortion By Thomson

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In “A Defense of Abortion,” Judith Jarvis Thomson argues in defense of the moral permissibility of abortion in several, but not all circumstances. First off, Thomson uses the expanding house example to refute the extremist view on abortion, which states that abortion is morally impermissible even in situations where the mother’s life is in danger. Thomson states that a mother has the right to kill an expanding child that will crush her to death in her house. Thus, Thomson derives the ownership thesis in which she claims that if a human is entitled to ownership of anything in life, it is his or her own body. Similarly, Thomson believes the mother owns the house and therefore has the right to terminate the child’s life. In this paper I will …show more content…

The most obvious conclusion is that as the owner of the house, the mother has the right to do with her body as she wishes. In this example, this can mean that no woman should ever have to sacrifice her own body for the sake of another individual. As the owner of her body, the mother should be the one who decides what is to be done with the fetus inside her body. However, I must point out that there is a very fine line in regards to this analogy and it is important to put limitations on where a woman can leverage this idea. In doing so, there is a certain degree of ambiguity in this example that makes the situation slightly …show more content…

The second part, in which bars were present, relates to a scenario in which contraception was used, but it failed. In saying it is ridiculous to say the burglar has the right to stay, Thomson is saying that abortion would be morally permissible in both cases. Regardless of the scenario, the use of an analogy equating burglary with pregnancy is flawed for a few reasons. First, in a burglary, the burglar is the individual who creates the situation. He makes a deliberate attempt to enter this individual’s home in order to steal their property. Conversely, in a pregnancy, the baby does not create the situation. In fact, the mother and the father, the two individuals who deliberately engaged in sexual intercourse, created the baby. Hence, there is a disparity in such a situation regarding who is at fault. Additionally, it is notable that a burglar enters a home to commit a robbery with the malicious intent of stealing. Due to this malicious intent in his actions, the burglar loses many of the rights that are granted to an innocent person. This contradicts the idea that a fetus is an innocent living creature, an idea that cannot be refuted by any ethical or sound argument. Hence, part of the fallacy in this analogy lies in the notion that Thomson is equating a fetus that is not desired to an aggressor who is breaking the law in order to

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