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Philosophy and the Morality of Abortion
Author(s)
Date Issued
1985-10
Date Available
2012-10-11T14:12:45Z
Abstract
Abortion is a philosophically interesting issue because both sides seem so certain of their conclusions, yet the issue is at the same time clearly a derivative one. It is also highly political, and needs to be seen within the context of the growth of the women's movement. A philosophical overview of the issue in section 1 construes the central claims of the pro-choice and anti-abortion positions as moral and conceptual constructions, which extend everyday moral thinking into the area of abortion. It notes the interesting relation between such constructions and other arguments about abortion, and how this is responsible for their social and historical specificity. Section 2 defends the pro-choice position as a victory of moral sensitivity over linguistic guile. Section 3 situates the argument within the politics of feminism, and recognises the limited contribution which philosophy is able to make.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
Journal
Journal of Applied Philosophy
Volume
2
Issue
2
Start Page
261
End Page
270
Copyright (Published Version)
1985, Society for Applied Philosophy
Subject – LCSH
Abortion--Moral and ethical aspects
Abortion
Philosophy
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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Philosophy_and_the_morality_of_abortion.pdf
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512.38 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
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