Well, no, it's not as good as having a living human being. There could be a miscarriage, or the child could be born with any number serious birth defects. Killing a severely retarded child is still murder however.Darth Wong wrote:I don't see how this is a problem for the financial analogy. Promissory notes are not considered as reliable as cash in terms of assets on the balance sheets; they occupy a space somewhere between nothing and cash in the bank, just as the fetus of a woman who plans to carry it to term occupies the same sort of "in-between" value. I'm only pointing out that the concept of this type of "future value" being taken into account does not necessarily force an anti-abortion conclusion.SVPD wrote:It seems to me that it's irrelevant if the woman plans to abort or not.
Women can and do change their minds at the last minute. As such, even if the killer knew the woman was going to have an abortion, he could not know before the fact that she would go through with it.
The point was that up until the procedure is actually done, the woman has the right to change her mind, and women can and do in fact do so. If someone were to kill the fetus after learning the woman's intention to do so, but prior to her having it done, he's ignoring that real possibility that she'll do so.
If I understand your promissory note analogy correctly, the note is the fetus and the payee of the note is the woman. The payor is the normal developmental process that will usually result in a baby.
To use the analogy, let's say that the payor has a certain amount of the money owed salted away in a vault (i.e. a partially-developed fetus). The Payee decides that she will forgive the debt (have an abortion). A burglar learns of this and steals the money from the vault (kills the fetus). The next day the payee learns of a mistake on their bank statement and realizes they cannot afford to forgive the debt (changes her mind about an abortion).
Now the payee cannot get their money because someone else has burglarized the payor.... perhaps not a perfect analogy but the main point is that the burglar/killer is taking upon themself a choice that can only be made by the payee/mother and which can be made at any time up until the procedure/transaction is done.