John C. Wright speaks very slowly to pro-choicers
April 24, 2008
He addresses the issue of the “personhood” of the unborn in response to a question asking about what distinctions exist, if any, between what is a “person” and what is a “human.”
It is not a legal question. Until just recently, the law held abortion to be illegal, and the overturning of those laws were not based on legal precedent.
It is not a biological question. What defines a homo sapiens to a biologist is genetic material, i.e. descent. There is no question that even a single-celled organism is living, and that, if it comes from a bisexual race, it has a mother and a father. The word ‘embryo’ refers to the stage of development of an organism of a species: for example, an unborn fox kit passed through an embryo stage of development. No biologist would argue that an unborn fox was not a member of the species “fox”.
It is absurd to classify an unborn homo sapiens and “not a member of any species” on the grounds of a lack of observable phenotype characteristics. No biologist classifies a bald man as ‘not a mammal’ on the grounds that he does not suckle his young, being a male, and is not hairy, being bald.
It is not a moral question. No one makes caring for a diseased or underdeveloped loved one dependent on that loved one’s ability to pass an IQ test or show some form specifically human behavior. If your husband has a stroke, and loses the human capacity for reasoning in his cortex, he becomes your dependent; he does not become your property or your livestock. When he dies, you still call a mortician, not a butcher.
So what it the question of personhood?
Personhood is an excuse. If one wishes to work one’s will upon the weak and helpless, one first removes their humanity in thought. Call the Jews sons of Pigs. Call the Negroes sub-human. Call the worthless old folk bread gobblers or vegetables. Called the unborn any name by what they are: human offspring. Babies.
He’s hardly the first to observe this, and he certainly won’t be the last. Ultimately, though, many of the arguments in favour of abortion reduce to this basic issue: denying the protection and rights afforded by a legal categorization to a segment of humanity — in this case, the unborn.
Oh, there are obvious practical and semantic differences between the current abortion regimes and, say, the plight of blacks in the U.S. prior to, and even after, the American Civil War. But the underlying logic is more or less the same: those things are not “people” and so can be mistreated/disposed of on a whim.
That’s what this debate is really about: at what point is it/should it be legal to kill a human being in any capacity other than an act of self-defence*?
* and lest anyone think I’ve just opened up a loophole, let me further observe that taking a life in self-defence requires, first and foremost, that the person against which we are defending ourselves be making a conscious, knowing effort to take our life. That is not a category which can be applied to any unborn child.
The truly scary thing about pro-choicers
February 28, 2008
What [pro-lifers] seem to have failed to recognize, therefore, at least with the necessary clarity, is that the humanity or inhumanity of the fetus is often no longer the issue - at least, not within the elite spheres of the pro-death movement…Agreed. I once interviewed a woman working in an abortion clinic. Our conversation became more heated (not good) and I spluttered something along these lines of “Don’t you know what the fetus is?” She in turn rolled her eyes at me and said “Of course. You think I don’t know? You think women don’t know?”
So it was then that I realized there are two types of pro-choice people: Those who naively believe the fetus is not a person until a certain magical moment in gestation and those who know the fetus is human from day one but don’t care.
As I’ve remarked before, the abortion debate is no longer about whether or not the unborn are human being — that particular question can be (and has been) put to rest, as any student of biology at even a high school level should be able to realize. That an unborn baby is both human (that is, of the species homo sapiens) and alive follows logically from the observation that a newborn baby is a) human (that is, of the species homo sapiens), and b) alive.
What the abortion debate has turned into, then (or, perhaps, what it was always about) is at what stage of development/life it is socially/morally/legally acceptable to kill a living human being. That’s all it comes down to. And for many women (and men), there is seemingly no problem with saying that it is acceptable to kill a human being during the gestational phase of its life. The fact that it is a human being is irrelevant to them. The fact that it is alive is irrelevant to them, except in the sense that its being alive is the problem to begin with. The fact that it is genetically distinct from either of its parents (that is: it is its own person) is irrelevant.
“Human” and “alive” are not, to some pro-choicers, sufficient categories to merit a right to life. To merit a right to life, something which is “human” and “alive” must also be “wanted” and, legally speaking, “a person.”
And that’s the scary part. Because we’ve heard that kind of talk before. And we know where it led.





