Utilitarian ethicist Peter Singer spoke recently at the Stevens Institute of Technology on a wide range of election issues. Journalist John Horgan, who directs a centre for science writing there, reported the highlights inScientific American. He admired Singer's cool and detached analysis and his apparent compassion. Here are Singer's views on abortion, which came as a surprise to Horgan.
First of all, he agreed with many pro-lifers that a fetus, even at six weeks, is a "living
human being." He showed us slides of fetuses,
because we should not "run away from what
abortion is."
Singer nonetheless believes that abortion is ethical,
because even a viable fetus is not a rational, self-aware
person with desires and plans, which would be cut
short by death; hence it should not have the same
right as humans who have such qualities. Abortion
is also justified, Singer added, both as a female
right and as a method for curbing overpopulation.
For very different reasons than abortion opponents,
Singer actually opposes Roe v. Wade.
Singer further surprised me--and showed his
meta-commitment to democracy and reason-when
he said that he, like Mitt Romney and his running
mate Paul Ryan, disliked Roe V. Wade. That 1973
Supreme Court decision, Singer felt, provides a
flimsy rationale for abortion and has corrupted the
process whereby Supreme Court Justices are chosen.
Ideally, Singer said, voters rather than unelected
judges should determine the legal status of abortion.
Singer nonetheless acknowledged that if Roe V. Wade
is overturned, some states might outlaw or severel
y restrict abortion. "I'm torn," he admitted.
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