Instigator / Pro
21
1740
rating
23
debates
100.0%
won
Topic
#4767

On balance, the majority of abortions performed in the US are immoral [for @SkepticalOne]

Status
Finished

The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.

Winner & statistics
Better arguments
9
0
Better sources
6
6
Better legibility
3
3
Better conduct
3
3

After 3 votes and with 9 points ahead, the winner is...

Savant
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Rated
Number of rounds
3
Time for argument
One week
Max argument characters
15,000
Voting period
Two weeks
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Minimal rating
None
Contender / Con
12
1551
rating
9
debates
66.67%
won
Description

RESOLUTION:
THBT: On balance, the majority of abortions are immoral.

BURDEN OF PROOF:
BoP is shared equally. Pro argues that the majority of abortions are immoral. Con argues that the majority of abortions are not immoral.

DEFINITIONS:
Abortion is “the willful and direct termination of a human pregnancy and of the developing offspring.”
Conception is “the fusion of a sperm and egg to form a zygote.”
Immoral means “morally wrong.”

RULES:
1. All specifications presented in the description are binding to both participants.
2. Only SkepticalOne may accept.

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Better arguments
3 point(s)
Better sources
2 point(s)
Better legibility
1 point(s)
Better conduct
1 point(s)
Reason:

Savant gives six main arguments defending his position. From the first three, he comes in focusing on a clear point of agreement, that persons should not be harmed (along with a criteria for harm), a criteria for personhood where Humans are persons, and Don Marquis's account for the wrongness of killing. Frankly speaking, the 4th is basically the same thing as his 3rd argument. The rest include an argument from the wrongness of creating dependency and killing (which is intuitively the strongest when coupled with the personhood outline) and a parental obligations argument. The response from the con is far simpler focusing on self-ownership using two thought experiments from Thompson (the violinist and people seeds) and denying the personhood of the unborn with a clever cancer cell reduction on pro's account, and criteria based on the capacity for consciousness and metabolism.

(I) Personhood

While both accounts of personhood have weaknesses, pro never technically affirmed that human DNA alone was sufficient for personhood, so the initial charge con levied goes through. Clearly, human and cancer cells are not members of the homo-sapien species, however, pro does not contain a clear definition of what it would mean to be a member of the species. Nevertheless, appealing to standard biology sides with the affirmative. Con calling pro's account of personhood circular was a clear misunderstanding of the view because a human was never stated to be analytically identical to a person. This is made clear as Savant has added an "able to be harmed condition" from round one.

The transformation analogy is pro's best attack on con's notion of capacity showing that coma patients don't in fact have all the structures necessary to generate consciousness, they (at least sometimes) need some form of treatment. This captures con's account, which commits his view to the permissibility of stabbing comatose people to death apparently. Because pro actually cited a source to defend this and con appeals to the "benchmark having been passed" which misses the point, pro strongly wins this point. Con had some interesting objects to pro's account of harm, however, pro was able to take care of them by appealing to prime-facie clauses and harm/reward trade-off analysis for ultima-facie considerations

(II) Autonomy/Self-Ownership

The people seeds and violinist experiments are dealt with for being disanalogous, none of them applying to consensual sex. He then forwards the dopamine room to push the intuition that even when there is a low chance of an event occurring, we still bear responsibility for making people dependent on us when done consensually. Con just bites the bullet on the dopamine room. Con also comments that pro had not clarified his view on rape cases which is just irrelevant to the debate proposition as the consensual cases already capture the majority. He also doesn't track pro's point confusing the percentage of sex that results in pregnancy with the relevant disanalogy. Because of relevant dis-analogies presented for both cases where con fails to respond to one, and just accepts the entitlement of the other pro wins on this point as well.

I won't focus on the rest of the arguments pro gave and keep concentrating on the major ones that evolved throughout the debate. First, the capacity criteria for personhood has obvious flaws (reduction on lack of rights for comatose people). Con already seems to implicitly acknowledge that this would be a bad entailment by resisting the conclusion, but fails to demonstrate that this doesn't follow from his view. Con missed a lot of opportunities to attack pro on personhood, but pro did well in giving himself a strong groundwork with several of his other arguments. Marquis's reasoning for instance does not even require one to take the view that the unborn are persons. Either way, both major points were mostly one-sided towards the affirmative.

It's good to note that having these sorts of debates will never stop being just as important as they are interesting but pro was "never in trouble" here to use chess.com language. It's good to see people like this coming up although both sides could have made many improvements.

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Better arguments
3 point(s)
Better sources
2 point(s)
Better legibility
1 point(s)
Better conduct
1 point(s)
Reason:

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1OeG7sXs7flNcpz10YpyANIzX8v0W8CHuK5rhVlcD95k/edit?usp=sharing

Let me know if you have any questions or concerns.

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Better arguments
3 point(s)
Better sources
2 point(s)
Better legibility
1 point(s)
Better conduct
1 point(s)
Reason:

Both sides had a very clear, concise structure and addressed each other's points well. The analogies used were also helpful for understanding the arguments, but pro's were more on-point and resembling of the topics than con's.
Pro's arguments were much more morally centered, while con's were very much from a utilitarian view and focused on the solution that causes the greatest happiness. Causing happiness, however, does not necessarily mean doing what is morally right, and the topic of this debate is "The majority of abortions are immoral".