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Zenit - 14 Jan 04
Philosopher Norberto Bobbio Dies; Was Defender of Life Italian
Agnostic Argued Against Abortion
Political and cultural leaders mourned the death of Norberto Bobbio,
an intellectual whose ethical sensitivity led one publication to label him
an authoritative voice for Christian culture -- despite his agnosticism.
Bobbio, who was hospitalized on Dec. 27 with a severe respiratory
ailment, died last Friday in Turin. He was 94.
Vatican Radio, and the Holy See's semiofficial newspaper L'Osservatore
Romano, remembered him as "one of the most outstanding lay figures of the
20th century."
For many years, Bobbio was professor of philosophy of law; political
science; and philosophy of politics at Turin University. In 1984, Italian
President Sandro Pertini appointed him senator for life.
Bobbio described himself as "a layman, not laical or anti-clerical."
In recent years, the review Civiltà Cattolica proposed the philosopher as
an example of high ethical sensitivity and labeled him an authoritative
spokesman of Christian culture, despite his professed agnosticism.
The Italian newspaper Avvenire recalled that on the eve of the
referendum on abortion in Italy, the May 8, 1981, issue of the newspaper
Corriere della Sera published an interview in which Bobbio explained his
reasons for being pro-life.
Bobbio believed that abortion was a "very difficult" question. He
called it the "classic problem in which we face a conflict of rights and
duties; above all, the fundamental right of the one conceived, that right
to birth on which, in my opinion, one cannot compromise."
"It is the same right in the name of which I am opposed to the death
penalty," Bobbio said. "One can speak of the legalization of abortion, but
one cannot be morally indifferent in the face of abortion."
He continued: "Stuart Mill says: 'The individual is sovereign over himself,
over his mind and over his body.' Feminists now say: 'My body is mine and
I manage it.' It would seem to be a perfect application of [Mill's]
principle. Instead, I say it would be aberrant to include abortion in this"
line of reasoning.
"The individual is one: individual," Bobbio added. "In the case of
abortion there is 'another' in the woman's body. The suicide disposes of
his own life. With abortion, the life of another is disposed of."
Asked if his comments might surprise the secular world, Bobbio replied: "I
would like to ask what surprise there can be in the fact that a layman
considers 'You shall not kill' as valid in an absolute sense, as a
categorical imperative. And, on my part, I am surprised that laymen leave
to believers the privilege and honor of affirming that one must not kill."
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