Repository | Series | Book | Chapter
Abortion and the right to not be pregnant
pp. 57-77
Abstract
James E. Mahon examines the role played by Judith Jarvis Thomson's essay on abortion, published in Philosophy & Public Affairs, in the subsequent development of practical ethics as a field of inquiry. Mahon argues that the journal put the topic of abortion on the philosophical map, and Thomson's article did more than any other, before it or since, to energize philosophical debate about abortion. Mahon also analyses the contrasting arguments of Thompson and Joseph Mahon on abortion, before concluding with an examination of the distinction between the claims that abortion is "indecent" and that it is "impermissible".
Publication details
Published in:
Fives Allyn, Breen Keith (2016) Philosophy and political engagement: reflection in the public sphere. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Pages: 57-77
DOI: 10.1057/978-1-137-44587-2_4
Full citation:
Mahon James Edwin (2016) „Abortion and the right to not be pregnant“, In: A. Fives & K. Breen (eds.), Philosophy and political engagement, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 57–77.