Supreme Court and Abortion

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Revision as of 10:49, 29 December 2009 by Barb (talk | contribs) (New page: Peter Kreeft in “[http://www.catholiceducation.org/articles/abortion/ab0045.html The Apple Argument Against Abortion]” Crisis, December 2000, writes: :[In Roe v Wade, the Court’s rea...)
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Peter Kreeft in “The Apple Argument Against Abortion” Crisis, December 2000, writes:

[In Roe v Wade, the Court’s reasoning was ground on a claim of skepticism about when human life begins.] "Since we don’t know when human life begins, the argument went, we cannot impose restrictions. (Why it is more restrictive to give life than take it, I cannot figure out.) So here is my refutation of Roe on its own premises, it’s skeptical premises..."

It is recommended that these 4 possibilities should be presented in the next Supreme Court case. It should then be argued that that post-abortion psychological complications arise from the fact that the Court's argument from skeptism leaves women exposed to angst of uncertainty or even positive belief that they are guilty of killing innocent human lives, their own children, in fact. Unless the Court was in a God-like position to reassure women that abortion never involves the killing of a human life, but only has the illusion of doing so, the psychological problems with abortion will always remain.