Originally posted by icespeed
the thing is, science is allowing earlier and earlier preemie survival. used to be, if you were thirty-six weeks then it was touch-and-go. now they've got incubators and respirators and stuff, it's twenty-eight weeks. what if they invent artificial wombs and manage to support embryos from conception? (not likely, but it's a possibility.) so it's kinda moving towards pro-life/anti-choice if you define abortion as immoral if the baby can survive without the mother.
It's only defined as immoral because the foetus is at that stage alive, though; the issue is not whether or not the foetus
can live, because that's wholly presumptative.
Abortion law is not about morality, but protecting the rights of the child. The issue over the
legality of abortion, is when does that foetus become a living child which is to be protected (has rights)?
We can't really form laws on the basis of morality but societal harm anyways; the sort of universal lawas against rape, murder, theft, etc can be clearly defined as crimes because they do tangible damage.
With abortion, the concept of damage is highly subjective; is you view a foetus as being alive, then it's murder
but if you view a foetus as a set of differentiating cells (not alive), then it isn't. It's only when that foetus becomes legally a person (not based on any religious or personal notions of when life begins, but the best unbiased scientific evidence) that it should be protected.