I am Pro-choice as of right now with the way society and technology as it is. People are having trouble feeding themselves of right now and over population is an impending issue. But, in the future ( let's say in the next 150 years or longer) pro-life can be reasonable conclusion, we may be able to feed everyone and we would be able to make a system where the mother can be taken care of during pregnancy and when she gives birth the baby could immediately go to an adoption center. Imagine if Albert Einsteins mother aborted him? Great minds can be destroyed by accident and that isn't something to risk in the future.
A couple of cool points you bring up here, imho. I don't see overpopulation and lack of food availability as problems, or at least not problems without solutions that already exist. To me, the real issues are social and economic conventions and structures that prevent the implementation of existing solutions. We're not efficient at all by any means, we're selfish, we waste to a sickening degree, and we're bound by very odd and outdated traditions and ideals. Like, we coexist with ideas like planned obsolescence, patents, and protectionism. wtf?
But the other thing is the idea of evaluating potential before making the decision to eliminate it, which I love, though I'm not sure how it's done. We don't know what produces great minds. Though don't get me wrong, there's plenty of placebo effect and dunning-kruger flying around with regards to genetics and parenting and our best current knowledge on the subject. You might be interested in the idea of adversity being a formative force to an otherwise supple and undifferentiated mind, and/or component parts of it. But if that's the case, then that also reduces the importance of pre-elimination assessment, though not entirely. Applying niche theory and integration could be fun too. What if we shift our focus from individual intelligence to meta-intelligence, like, say... bees?
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I guarantee there are different selective forces at play at these different levels of organization, and I'm willing to bet that some of what's elected for on the individual scale is grossly counterproductive on the meta scale. What is a bee, anyway? Going beyond the hive level entirely, is a bee truly separate from, say, flowering plants, via co-evolution? Or beyond that?