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Yup. And that was part of the argument for Rowe v Wade. The court observed that there are good arguments on both sides, and no agreement among Americans. Courts had no business enforcing one view because they happened to agree. We've now got a court intentionally chosen to have a specific view (even though two of them apparently lied to Susan Collins about it).
Personally this is one I struggle with, given some of the many complexities of it. Whatever my personal views on the morality or ethics behind abortion the law has to be something that is objective and neutral, simply because I do not believe that government at any level has any business imposing legislation based on a morality that is necessarily subjective, unless there is a clearly identifiable imposition by one upon another (hence why I believe rape and murder should be illegal while prostitution and drug use should not)
Up to a point the embryo/fetus is entirely dependent upon the mother for its very survival. While it could easily be argued that the removal of the unborn from the womb is an act of violence against them it could also be argued that the mother is under no obligation to continue to support their life. A very imperfect analogy would be the person who stumbles upon another in the street who is bleeding to death - there is no legal obligation to offer any assistance at all. The analogy is imperfect because the act of removing the embryo/fetus is an active step against it rather than a passive step to decline to support it - it would be more akin to finding the victim bleeding, figuring they were unlikely to make it and putting a bullet in their head.
Once the fetus reaches a stage where it could survive outside the womb the case to allow abortion becomes weaker.
Issues like rape muddy the waters, as do situations where continuing a pregnancy would put the mother's life in immediate danger.
Even the problem relating to "good arguments on both sides" does little than defer the issue of when life begins to a matter of opinion. I remember reading some time ago (I can't remember where, or I'd link) something about the end of life and determing when life has ended. Using similar reasoning it seems safe to conclude that life begins before actual birth. It certainly makes no sense to say that this 18-week fetus is just a bunch of cells and not alive while that 18-week fetus is a living human.