Two definitions?
Double definitions?
That would be handy when your trying to double talk.
Connotative and denotative usages are not some mystery. It's something you should have learned about in high school. I take it you suffer from the same horrific public education I do. Still you should know what the difference is and use them properly.
So what? If you fail to call it that, does it change anything of substance about it?
They would not be "abortions" as most people use the term. You are making a semantical argument. Would a rose by any other name would still smell as sweet? Of course you could call a "rose" a "towtruck" and it would smell the same.
Whatever you want to call it. One method is murder and one is not. By trying to muddy the waters and say it's still an abortion is to purposefully try obfuscate with semantics. You are arguing about what something is called ... .We are arguing principles. We can call it something else if you like, it doesn't matter.
Let's move beyond the hall monitor attitude and deal with actual substance.
Words change meanings all the time. Look at the word conception. It doesn't mean the same thing it used to. Often when people say conception anymore, they mean fertilization ... but then the hall monitor fool pops his geeky head in and says, "Oh no, no, no .... you can't use that term like that anymore or I'll accuse you of double speak".
(If one wanted to be a true hall monitor they could point out that you've confused double-speak with equivocation.)
There you go again!
Appealling to things you don't have!
I wonder what that is in Latin :think:
Appealing to things I don't have?? Are you saying I lied about something?
Whatever you are feebly implying, I was completely honest. Everything about my story was completely true.
And I made a point that is relevant to the discussion that you ran away from - namely that trying to save someone and failing is not the same as causing them to die. And moreso, that experience gain by the attempt often leads to better results in subsequent tries.
Fool-Q1 Do you admit that trying to save a life and failing is not the same as purposefully murdering someone?
Fool-Q2 If you answered "Yes" to the above --- then what is your argument besides semantics?
Fool-Q3 What is your motive in trying to find any excuse to argue for abortion? Is it your desire to try to argue for some gray in a clearly black and white issue? Or are you just making some irrelevant point?
Fool-Q4 If you answered you were looking for gray to Q3, is the gray you are looking for semantically gray, or gray in substance?