Abortion Ethics

Cards (11)

  • When was abortion legalised?
    Abortion was legalised in 1967 by the Abortion Act. However, certain criteria had to be met before a woman could have an abortion.
  • In 2021, over 200,000 abortions took place in the UK. This was a record high.
  • Secular arguments for abortion include:
    1. A woman's right to choose.
    2. The embryo does not have equal rights to the mother.
    3. Legal abortions are safer than illegal abortions.
    4. The woman's health is more important.
  • Catholics believe that life starts at conception, therefore abortion is not permissible unless a consequence of the Doctrine of Double Effect.
  • For Protestants, there is less uniformity over their beliefs in abortion. The majority are against abortion but there is no set belief, unlike Catholicism.
  • In the Church of England, it is taught that abortion is wrong due to the Sanctity of Life Principle.
  • In CoE, abortion may be permitted if it is the 'lesser of two evils'.
  • Situation Ethics would judge it based on the most agapeic thing to do. If abortion is the better option, it may be permitted.
  • Natural Moral Law aligns with Catholicism so takes a similar position abortion and other matters.
  • Natural Moral Law believes that the purpose of humans is to reproduce and preserve life. Abortion goes against this.
  • Pope John Paul III declared abortion to be wrong as it is the 'deliberate killing of a human being'.