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Pro-Life Position Against Embryonic Stem Cell Research is Rational
Source: National Review; July 23rd Issue
Pro-Life
Position Against Embryonic Stem Cell Research is Rational
by Ramesh Ponnuru
[Pro-Life
Infonet Note: Ramesh Ponnuru is a senior editor for the
newsweekly National Review.]
Americans'
attitudes toward abortion are notoriously muddled. But it is
safe to say that they tend to dislike pro-lifers more than pro-choicers,
even when they themselves favor curbs on abortion. Pro-lifers have a
suspect, a frightening, passion. They are agitators; they are religious
zealots. Pro-choicers, on the other hand, are the party of reason. They
see all the pitfalls of prohibiting abortion. They understand that
abortion raises issues much more complex than sentimental slogans about
"protecting unborn babies" can capture.
This
is, I think, a widespread view about the combatants in the abortion
wars. It is also close to 180 degrees from the truth. Sentiment has
been
the pro-choicers' ally more often than not. The pro-life position, on
the
other hand, must ultimately be rooted in rigorous logic. A pro-life
position that is merely sentimental is a weak and unsustainable thing
--
as demonstrated, most recently, in the controversy over embryonic
stem-cell research.
Pro-choicers
can depend more reliably on sentiment than pro-lifers for the
simple reason that distressed pregnant women elicit more sympathy than
en
dangered fetuses. Nobody remembers being a fetus. Nobody has held a
fetus's hand. But many women know what it is like to be pregnant under
difficult circumstances, or can easily imagine it. All of us, men and
women alike, have known or can imagine a woman we care about in that
situation: a sister, a friend. The fetus has almost no emotional claim
on
us. It -- we think of the young fetus as an "it," not a "he"
or "she,"
although of course every fetus has a chromosomally determined sex --
is an
abstraction to us, usually nameless.
Smart
people have attempted to found moral theory on natural sentiments:
One thinks of no less a figure than Adam Smith. But these attempts are
doomed. Untutored sentiment is a poor guide to morality. No profound
knowledge of history or psychology is necessary to see that our sympathy
often fails to recognize the legitimate moral claims of those we do
not
know or of those we do not look like. Tender feelings alone cannot lead
us
to grhtml the requirements of decency or justice. It takes abstract
reasoning to tell us, first, that the fetus is a living human being,
and
then to follow that premise to the eventual conclusion that abortion
is a
violation of human rights.
To
say that the pro-life position is rooted in abstract logic is not, of
course, to deny that its adherents possess strong emotions about the
matter, or even that their emotions are stronger than those of
pro-choicers. As Richard Brookhiser has remarked in this connection,
thoughts, if they are taken seriously, do not lie idly on the mind's
table. They lead to further thoughts, and emotions and sensibilities
form
around them like crystals.
Nor
do I mean to suggest that pro-lifers never make non-rational appeals.
Many pro-choicers find the pro-life movement's rhetoric about "babies"
manipulative. Fetuses aren't babies, they say. But pro-lifers don't
really
hold the views they hold because they think fetuses are babies; rather,
they know that fetuses are members of human race. (Fifteen-year-olds,
31-year-olds, and 62-year-olds aren't babies, either, but nobody thinks
it's okay to kill them.) The campaign against partial-birth abortion
is an
attempt by pro-lifers to win support from Americans in the "mushy
middle"
by stressing the grisliness of some abortions. But pro-lifers took up
that
campaign as a tactic, not because they really believe one method of
abortion is worse than another.
For
pro-choicers, however, an appeal to sentiment is frequently not merely
a tactic or a bit of loose rhetoric but the entirety of the argument.
Katha Pollitt, The Nation's engaging feminist columnist, jeers at
pro-lifers for fretting about the fate of clusters of cells smaller
than a
fingernail. But surely size cannot be our criterion for determining
when
rights should be protected.
If
the appeal of sentiment has been powerful in the debate over abortion,
it has been irresistible in the one over embryonic stem cells. Research
using these cells may yield cures or treatments for Parkinson's disease,
Alzheimer's, and other ailments. But the extraction of the cells, and
thus
the research, requires the destruction of embryos. A recent cover story
on
stem cells in Newsweek was typical of press coverage in following the
usual script of pro-life religious fanatics vs. science. But this is
in
fact a conflict in which the average person's emotional reaction is
almost
completely one-sided. On the one hand, people -- movie stars, relatives
of
congressmen and journalists, your next-door neighbor -- with terrible
diseases. On the other hand, what looks like a clump of cells in some
lab.
Indeed,
the pro-abortion writer Anna Quindlen has advocated stem-cell
research on the precise grounds that it would make people even more
emotionally inclined to dismiss concerns about abortion: "[S]ome
who
believe that life begins at conception may look into the vacant eyes
of an
adored parent with Alzheimer's or picture a paralyzed child walking
again,
and take a closer look at what an embryo really is." Quindlen would
have
us judge difficult moral questions by taking a look and forming a picture
-- by acts of dumb perception rather than of intellection. This is not
surprising coming from a woman whose nonfiction oeuvre practically
constitutes a sustained implicit brief against the application of logic
to
social controversies.
More
surprising, perhaps, is that many people who are usually pro-life
have adopted this way of thinking, or rather not thinking, to justify
embryonic stem-cell research. Here is Republican senator Orrin Hatch
speaking to the New York Times: "I just cannot equate a child living
in
the womb, with moving toes and fingers and a beating heart, with an
embryo
in a freezer." He has made similar comments elsewhere, with particular
emphasis on the womb/freezer distinction and the embryo's lack of visibly
human characteristics. But surely neither temperature nor location is
morally decisive. Nobody would question whether a twelve-year-old who
had
been conceived in a lab was a human being entitled to full rights as
such.
Wall
Street Journal editor Robert Bartley, who while not a pro-lifer
himself is a frequent ally of pro-lifers, has made a similar argument
for
embryonic stem-cell research. Using the term for a six-day-old embryo,
he
writes, "I would find a funeral service for a blastocyst gro tesque."
Most
miscarriages do not occasion funerals either, but presumably Bartley
would
not deny that what miscarriages end are tiny human lives. Blastocysts
may
not look like human beings at first glance. But on reflection, they
look
exactly like human beings -- exactly like human beings at that stage
of
development; exactly like all of us once looked. (Not that stem-cell
research and miscarriages raise the same moral issues. Michael Kinsley
remarks in Time that since pro-lifers are not exercised about the
thousands of miscarriages that happen every year -- a "mass slaughter
of
embryos" -- they shouldn't oppose the destruction of a few embryos
for
medical research. This is a miscarriage of logic. The elderly die in
large
numbers every year, too, but that doesn't mean it's okay to extract
organs
they need to survive for research purposes.)
One
virtue of the pro-life position is its clarity. Life begins at
conception, and taking human life can be allowed under only the strictest
of circumstances. Pro-choicers have a much harder time drawing a line
past
which life is unambiguously protected. Their views of when life begins
generally fall into one of three categories: 1) The fetus, like
Schrdinger's cat, exists in a kind of suspended state of life/non-life
until the mother decides what she wants; 2) there is some continuum
in
which a fetus that is not a human life gradually becomes one; or 3)
we
don't really need to think about this obscure theological mystery. (Oddly
enough, in the philosophical literature on abortion it is more common
to
see pro-choicers speculating on when "ensoulment" might occur
than to see
pro-lifers pondering the question.) In practice, they appear to draw
the
line at birth. At least their most powerful contingent, the judges,
do.
A
pro-life position not rooted in logic ends up having the same
line-drawing problem. When do pro-life supporters of stem-cell research
believe life begins_ They would seem to believe that a clump of matter
that is not a person somehow becomes inhabited by a person as it develops.
Rather than defend this theoretical disaster bordering on superstition,
some of these pro-lifers have resorted to the name games that pro-choicers
have used in the past: Blastocysts aren't embryos, embryos that have
not
been implanted are pre-embryos, etc. But none of these nominal
distinctions -- nor the biological distinctions they denote -- mark
a
point of moral distinction.
Bartley
describes himself as a member of the "mushy middle" on abortion
as
though it were good in itself not to draw principled distinctions. He
opposes partial-birth abortion because it is ugly, supports stem-cell
research because nobody grieves for blastocysts, seeks a middle ground
because the extremists are off-putting: a clump of positions united
only
by sensibility.
The
trouble with this middle ground is that, in addition to giving up
territory that should be defended, it is itself indefensible territory.
Slippery slopes are slippery because the logic that starts you down
them
will lead you further down. During the stem-cell debate, people have
said
that it's okay to use embryos for research because we already "discard"
plenty of embryos as a byproduct of in vitro fertilization; they could
with equal validity say that we should allow re search on five-month-old
fetuses because we allow them to be aborted. Judges have said that we
have
to allow partial-birth abortion, or even euthanasia, because we allow
abortion. The Washington Post says that the logic of abortion rights
does
not permit the law to charge people with murder when they kill an unborn
child in the course of an assault on a pregnant woman, even if the woman
considers it murder.
Slippery-slope
arguments rarely succeed because people discount the
possibility of remote future horrors; they think they will be able to
stop
the slide. But horrors can get less horrible as the future becomes less
remote. People adjust their sensibilities. In 1973, not even pro-abortion
lawyers were challenging Texas's law against partial-birth abortion.
Back
then, embryo-killing re search would have seemed monstrous. I have read
the argument (in Reason, the libertarian magazine, as it happens) that
people predicted all kinds of dire consequences from in vitro
fertilization that did not happen, so why not allow cloning_ One of
the
dire consequences of in vitro fertilization, however, is precisely that
we
are debating cloning now.
A
common trope of the press coverage of the stem-cell conflict -- which
reeks of weariness at the continued existence of pro-lifers -- is that
it's a shame this "scientific issue" has gotten caught up
in the
"politics" of abortion. But it is caught up in the issue because
the
premises of the arguments are the same: Either conception results in
a new
human being deserving of legal protection or it doesn't. No amount of
sophisticated hairsplitting over bioethics is going to work if it ignores
that awkward, obvious question.
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