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The SLED Test : Why the unborn
should not be excluded from the human family
By Paul Stark
Editor's note. This is the
first in an occasion series reprinted from the newspaper of
Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life. MCCL is National Right to
Life's Minnesota affiliate.
The pro-choice position, in
effect, says that we may kill members of one group of humans
(the unborn) for elective reasons but not members of other
groups (toddlers or adults, for example). To support a right to
abortion, then, one must hold that there is some morally
significant difference between the unborn and those who have
already been born--a difference that warrants radically
different treatment.
Is there such a difference?
Philosopher Stephen Schwarz created (and Scott Klusendorf, among
others, made popular) the acronym SLED to summarize the
differences between unborn and born human beings. By using this
helpful tool, pro-lifers can show that discrimination is not
justified.
S – Size. The unborn human
is smaller than an infant, but most people are smaller than
basketball star Kevin Garnett. Size doesn't make us more or less
valuable.
L – Level of Development.
The unborn is at an earlier stage of his or her development than
a newborn, but an eight-year-old child is less developed (both
physically and mentally) than an adolescent. Older, stronger,
more intelligent humans do not have more dignity and fundamental
rights than those who are younger, weaker, less intelligent and
more vulnerable.
E – Environment. A trip
through the birth canal cannot account for a change in the
rights of a human being. Location does not affect who or what we
are. A man doesn't forfeit his right to life by walking to the
other side of the dining room.
D – Degree of Dependency.
The unborn is totally dependent on his or her mother for life,
but so are newborn babies. In fact, everyone relies on other
people and things to some degree. We don't question the
personhood of those who are dependent on kidney machines,
insulin or pacemakers.
None of these four differences
between the unborn and the born is relevant in a way that would
justify killing the former. It is clear that human value is not
contingent on such characteristics and abilities. Rather, we
have fundamental dignity and basic rights, including the right
to life, by virtue of the kind of thing that we are (human
beings).
It follows that all human beings,
being equal in their common humanity, are equal in having a
right to life. Killing an unborn human being by abortion, like
killing any other human for the same reasons, is a serious moral
wrong. |