I may have misread, but I think you understood my point.
I don't think going over maxims/imperatives are going to get us anywhere. As far as moral duty is concerned...the mother has a moral duty to her children...but to what extent?
Motives: they do matter. I wish you would not throw away the argument of motives. Motives defines murder from killing and determines if stealing is wrong or not.
For you to state from your sources that abortion is not immoral because it does not have moral personhood does not sum up the problem. (If you agree that if the fetus does have moral personhood=abortion immoral any under circumstances, please skip the the very end).
Here are some truths first: 1)fetus' are genetically the same as humans, 2)fetus' can grow up to look just like you and me, think like you and me, feel like you and me, and rationalize like you and me, 3)Most likely, Fetus' do not feel pain if aborted, 4)Still undetermined what allows someone to reason/morality and when a fetus gains this ability...maybe when it's 3yrs old/or maybe when it is 7weeks old.
Fetus' are not human because they cannot suffer, but let's be clear that being born without nerves doesn't make you any less human. Therefore, this suffering must be mental/emotional, suffering from lost loved ones/doing bad on a test. Also, Fetus' cannot reason.
Also, morality=action and motive. Dependent upon two things. Example, I kill my dog. The court wants to know if what I did was wrong. First, the action is kill. Still undecided if it is murder or self-defense until we hear the motive since murder/self-defense both = morality in this equation. If my dog was threatening my life, doing so without me causing it to, self-defense, and if I told the court because I thought it would be fun, I am charged with murdering my dog and get whatever punishment the court does.
In abortion, never ever can the fetus be held responsible for it's actions during pregnancy. Abortion=killing a living thing. What are your reasons? Putting me in mortal danger=motive. Now let's say for the for sake of argument the fetus was doing something unnatural instead of the common illnesses the mother had that would result in death by birth. I like to compare this to the people in Hitler's time. People today ask how could his followers do something so wretched...not killing people, but their methods. The only way it was possible was if they were lied to...told that killing Jews was a good thing, and if they were brought up this way, that would explain a lot.
Action=killing somone. Motive=I was brought up told this was the right thing to do. If that was proven in court, that person could very well walk out free, regardless of how many people killed.
Problem with saying the baby killed the mom is that there are other things, even if not an illness, that would cause a mom to die by birth. So, the fetus=action-->really is no action. Kind of just moves a long with the flow. Motive-->Morally (I use the word Morally since of the example of drunk driving) unconscious. Based on these two facts, it is impossible to tell what a fetus did was immoral or immoral, but because it didn't do anything immoral, it will walk.
Unfortunately for the mom, she commits the action which tells us there is, by theory, a motive, even if the motive was like the Hitler case.
1) Willingly got pregnant: she knew exactly what was going to happen. She was going to have a baby and if life happened (she was going to die)...well life happens. Life cannot be fair for everyone and to make your life fair at the cost of an innocent life is immoral.
2) Raped--->not willingly pregnant. Probably chose not to get pregnant to not have to deal with the situation. Example: Someone is shooting at me. I am going to die. I see this gun locked up next to me and if I take it and use it, I can defend my self. Problem, if the case get's broken, someone randomly in the world will die...similar to that one movie about pressing the red button for money at the cost of human lives.
Do you take the gun to defend yourself? You can, but would it be immoral? Yes, if you knew what the consequences were. If you didn't know the consequences, then you got lucky and your action was neither immoral or moral, but by definition, all we care about is was it immoral if you didn't know and the answer is no.
This is my way of saying even if you get raped, the act of abortion is still immoral since there are no motives good enough that outweigh the cost of a human life.
Problem is: can the fetus be human? Doesn't reason, doesn't feel emotional/mental suffering. Has no care in this world...yet it will grow up to be human. Show me an example where something without the human genetics becomes human. You would have thought by now we would of heard of a chimpanzee having a human baby by now right?
-----> focus here please: the act of abortion is still immoral since there are no motives good enough that outweigh the cost of a human life. This is Kamm's view and has a lot more respect than a lot of philosphers before, even Kant. I suggest we listen to what Kamm here is arguing then: the act of abortion is still immoral since there are no motives good enough that outweigh the cost of an innocent human life.
Arguing if the fetus is human or has moral personhood is where we need to focus please. The above statement has been tested very strongly throughout Kamms notes. This is why today moral personhood needs to be our focus because for abortion, the motive makes the action okay if and only if that fetus is not considered to have moral personhood.
Now, it seems like the fetus does not have moral personhood, but I will look more into that.
In the mean time, if the fetus does not have moral personhood, does the motive now make the action change from immoral to neither immoral or moral (Paying 5$ for a meal is neither immoral nor moral, but again, the immoral is what we care about for right now)