Originally posted by Tom31
I think you’ve presented the “medical” arguments fairly, but I think your analysis needs to be taken to another level. Suppose doctors said the following to parents of newborns:
“If we cut off one of your baby’s little fingers, s/he will never get it caught in a car door and it will never develop hangnail or arthritis. These benefits are extremely minor, but on the other hand, the surgical risk of removing the finger is quite low as well. Since the harms and benefits are pretty evenly balanced, we leave it up to parents to decide whether their children should have 10 fingers or 9.”
This would suggest that people in this country had a tradition of sacrificing children’s fingers, and the medical profession was afraid of the consequences if it said the obvious: that cutting off a child’s finger is contrary to medical ethics and just plain stupid.
I think you’ve presented the “medical” arguments fairly, but I think your analysis needs to be taken to another level. Suppose doctors said the following to parents of newborns:
“If we cut off one of your baby’s little fingers, s/he will never get it caught in a car door and it will never develop hangnail or arthritis. These benefits are extremely minor, but on the other hand, the surgical risk of removing the finger is quite low as well. Since the harms and benefits are pretty evenly balanced, we leave it up to parents to decide whether their children should have 10 fingers or 9.”
This would suggest that people in this country had a tradition of sacrificing children’s fingers, and the medical profession was afraid of the consequences if it said the obvious: that cutting off a child’s finger is contrary to medical ethics and just plain stupid.
Actually the official recommendations of the American Association of Pediatricians and the American Association of Family Practitioners have been against circumcision since the 1980s, when studies showed that babies do indeed feel pain from the procedure. I don't generally recommend them either. Definitive studies on the role of circumcision in the prevention of HIV infection are being conducted now. If it turns out that circumcision conveys strong protection against HIV infection then conceivably the recommendations may change.
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