| | Luke wrote, "However, I can still make the somewhat less powerful argument that parents passively accept these immoral conditions as moral and proper ones into which to bring a child into existence."
If, by bringing a child into an "immoral" world, parents committed an immoral act against him, then what would be wrong with terminating his life as a newborn once they realize the "mistake" they've made? Rather than allow him to grow up in such an immoral environment, couldn't they, by your logic, justifiably "euthanize" him in order to spare him the immoral conditions that await him as he continues to mature?
Of course, to kill him would be an even greater act of immorality and a profound act of injustice. So an interesting question arises: If it's an act of injustice to kill him once he's born, because you're denying him life, then why isn't it also an act of injustice to prevent him from being born (through an act of contraception or abortion), because by preventing him from being born you're also denying him life? The answer, of course, is that before he is born, he does not yet exist as a rights-bearing person. After he is born, he does.
Furthermore, even if we assume that a potential child has individual rights, you don't know what choice a potential child would make -- whether he would prefer to be born or not to be born. If he would prefer to be born into an immoral world, then by preventing his birth, either through contraception or abortion, you are denying him a life that he would prefer to experience. If he would prefer not to be born into an immoral world, then by giving birth to him, you are exposing him to a life that he would prefer not to experience.
However, you can't know one way or the other which he would choose, because he doesn't yet exist to make that choice. So, it doesn't follow that by bearing a child, you're either benefiting him or harming him. Once a child is old enough to appreciate life's advantages and disadvantages, he can decide for himself whether or not he was happy to have been born and whether or not he considers his life worth living. You are not in a position to make that choice, and you certainly cannot make it for him before he is born.
(Edited by William Dwyer on 12/21, 3:36pm)
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