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Sanctity of life

In religion and ethics, the sanctity of life, sometimes described as the inviolability of life,[1][2] is a principle of implied protection regarding aspects of sentient life that are said to be holy, sacred, or otherwise of such value that they are not to be violated. This can be applied to humans, animals or micro-organisms; for instance, in religions that practice Ahimsa, both are seen as holy and worthy of life. Sanctity of life sits at the centre of debate over abortion and euthanasia.[3]

In Islam[edit]

Islam considers all life forms sacred, but puts humans above other living things. Islam considers the unlawful killing of a person on the same level as the killing of all humanity. The same is applicable in the inverse: saving a life is as important as saving the entire of humanity.[11][12]


The Qur'an never explicitly refers to abortion, but other teachings can be applied to the matter.[13] Muslims believe that ensoulment occurs on the 120th day of gestation.[14] Before ensoulment, abortion is allowed for foetal anomalies. After ensoulment, all schools of Islam allow abortion to save the life of the mother, and in the case of an intrauterine death (miscarriage), but on little other grounds. However, there is a growing movement to allow abortion for malformed foetuses whose deaths are inevitable shortly after birth.[15] The inability to provide for a foetus is generally dismissed as an acceptable reason, but some schools of thought are more lenient on the matter. [13][14]

In Eastern religions[edit]

In Western thought, sanctity of life is usually applied solely to the human species (anthropocentrism, sometimes called dominionism), in marked contrast to many schools of Eastern philosophy, which often hold that all animal life is sacred―in some cases to such a degree that, for example, practitioners of Jainism carry brushes with which to sweep insects from their path, lest they inadvertently tread upon them.[16]

Abortion-rights movements

Anti-abortion movements

Buddhism

Jainism

Consistent life ethic

Culture of life

Fetal protection

Medical ethics

(in the US)

National Sanctity of Human Life Day

Religion and abortion

Right to life

US bill, repeatedly introduced since 1995, that has never become law

Sanctity of Life Act

Barry, Robert Laurence (2002). The Sanctity of Human Life and Its Protection. Lanham: University Press of America.

Bayertz, Kurt, ed. (1996). Sanctity of Life and Human Dignity. Philosophy and Medicine; v. 52. Dordrecht; Boston: Kluwer Academic.

Bernardin, Joseph Louis; et al. (1988). Consistent Ethic of Life. Kansas City, MO: Sheed & Ward.

Kass, Leon R. (March 1990). "Death with Dignity and the Sanctity of Life". Commentary. 89 (3). New York: American Jewish Committee: 33–43.  0010-2601. PMID 11652555.

ISSN

Keyserlingk, Edward W. (1979). . Protection of Life Series. Ottawa: Law Reform Commission of Canada. ISBN 9780662104452.

Sanctity of Life: or, Quality of Life in the Context of Ethics, Medicine, and Law: A Study

Kohl, Marvin (1974). . New York: Humanities Press. ISBN 9780391001954.

The Morality of Killing; Sanctity of Life, Abortion, and Euthanasia

Kuhse, Helga (1987). The Sanctity-of-Life Doctrine in Medicine: A Critique. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

McCormick, Richard A. (1981). "The Quality of Life and the Sanctity of Life". How Brave a New World?: Dilemmas in Bioethics. New York: Doubleday: 383–402.

Singer, Peter (2002). Unsanctifying Human Life: essays on ethics. Oxford: Blackwell.

Wildes, Kevin Wm.; Francesc Abel; John C. Harvey (1992). Birth, Suffering, and Death: Catholic Perspectives at the Edges of Life. Dordrecht; Boston: Kluwer Academic.