Doctors: Advances since Roe confirm abortion ‘takes life of unborn child’

by Jodi Marlin for Catholic News Agency

Read the Full Article at Catholic News Agency

 

At 15 weeks’ gestation, a fetus responds to touch. The neurotransmitters and nerves needed to process and transmit pain signals have formed, and most of the spinal cord has hardened into bone.

As early as 21 weeks, the fetus can survive outside the womb.

None of these realities were known in 1971, when a case came before the Supreme Court that would ultimately give a mother the right to abort her unborn child.

During the past 50 years, advances regarding the biological genesis of humans have disproven the basis on which the court, in Roe v. Wade, presumed a lack of justifiability of a ban on abortions — except to save the live of the mother — that was in place in the defendant’s home state of Texas.

The court’s 1973 decision legalizing abortion nationwide rested on the use of the word “person” in the 14th Amendment, which protects the mother’s privacy.

Notably, there was great disagreement over when an unborn child becomes a living being whose rights compete with those of the mother.

Since then, techniques in research tools and prenatal surgery, advancements in viability and the proliferation of support options for mothers with unexpected pregnancies have conspired to erode many of the arguments offered then and now for the right to terminate life in the womb.

Categories: 

More Stories

Gratitude and Redemption Thanksgiving Reflections

by Fr. Frederick Edlefsen
November 8, 2022

When Giovanni da Verrazzano explored North America’s eastern seaboard in 1524, on behalf of King Francis I of France,...Read more

The Romance of Hunch and Lexi - Part 2 - “Lexi’s Painting”

by Fr. Frederick Edlefsen
October 18, 2022
The Starfish Hotel. T-Rex Goofy Golf was on its left. Shark Head Souvenirs was on its right, featuring gigantic shark jaws swallowing the entrance...Read more

The Romance of Hunch and Lexi - Part 1 - "The Ace of Clubs"

by Fr. Frederick Edlefsen
September 16, 2022
Alexandra Hekla Royston Minervudottir-Beauchamp descended from a long and complex line of northern Europeans. Her father’s grandfather emigrated from Normandy to Saskatoon in the...Read more
Subscribe to Blog