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“… But I Could Never Have One”: The Abortion Intuition and Moral Luck

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 March 2020

Abstract

Starting from the intuition, shared by many women, that the legal right to an abortion must be defended but that they themselves could never undergo one, I offer an account of why pregnancy is morally valuable and why, nevertheless, it is often permissible to end one. Developing the idea that human pregnancy centrally involves the activity of calling a fetus into personhood, I argue that the permissibility of stopping this activity hinges on the goodness or badness of one's moral luck.

Type
Oppression and Moral Agency: Essays in Honor of Claudia Card
Copyright
Copyright © 2009 by Hilde Lindemann

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