ok doser
lifeguard at the cement pond
... a fetus doesn't behave like a human until way down the developmental road.
define "behave like a human"
... a fetus doesn't behave like a human until way down the developmental road.
Fetal development doesn't illustrate right or the point where it vests, where we must value and protect. It's only utility is in describing process. How we respond to that process is something else.I trust the local butcher to chop my meat, and I trust the tire guy to know his stuff about cars. Just like I trust an expert in fetal development to know about fetal development.
Of course I'm not saying that. I'm saying your expert in biology doesn't have an answer. He can tell you where this or that is true for the fetus, but not how to value it in relation to the point.If you are saying that there is no such thing as an expert, then I disagree.
I'm rebutting that presumption by noting the best that we can do is just another way of arbitrarily assigning value and I've noted the inherent danger. The literal and demonstrable best we can do is protect the right at every point.I recognize that. I'm not saying my position is perfect, but I think it's the best we can do with the current knowledge available.
I just gave it to you again. Regardless of what we believe about that point of vestment, we know that at some point it exists and that at that point we have no right to abrogate it. The only way to then guarantee we don't do what we should not do and have no right to do is to refrain from interfering at every point and to protect the unborn at every point.Do you have a better solution than 22 weeks? Do you think it should not be allowed at all? I've answered a lot of questions explaining mt position, but I'm afraid others haven't been so kind as to define and defend a position of their own
The problem is in assuming brain development controls the issue. It's not demonstrably so, only one way of valuing.The probability comes from the likelihood that we are wrong about the way in which our brains develop and operate. It's not likely that we are, but there's always a shot
So if a woman believed her fetus wasn't a person, had no rights until it drew breath you wouldn't defend that fetus against her actions the day before she would give birth naturally? If your answer is that you would protect it then you make my point. The rest is simply degree.I don't think so.
I'm saying the only difference between any of us is where we draw the line. Past that drawing, when we recognize the human right, we are obligated to protect, to act.Are you saying that by enforcing a long deadline, I'm being militant?
If the fetus is human, with rights vested, we already agree (supra) no such right exists on the part of the mother. And if we understand that we cannot say where that right is established without imposing an arbitrary value then we must protect the right itself by protecting the unborn who might possess it.But by disallowing any abortion to take place, you are removing certain rights from an adult woman because you think that maybe.....just maybe......the fetus inside her is "human" even though there is no actual evidence showing that. I disagree with that
You're deciding that consciousness is what defines our humanity and the point where right attaches. It isn't a logical necessity, only a valuation.Biologists/neurologists would know better than anyone else when a human brain becomes "conscious" (or "human" or whatever. I think you get what I'm trying to convey)
There is no real better here. That's rather the point. There's no authority that isn't itself inherently subjective.Who would be better, in your opinion? What experts in "humanity" are there that exist?
Doesn't behave like a human? If life begins at conception, then every event and action made by the zygote up until that "22 weeks" would be part of it behaving like a human.And completely literally, you are correct. But we both know that a fetus doesn't behave like a human until way down the developmental road.
Fetal development doesn't illustrate right or the point where it vests, where we must value and protect. It's only utility is in describing process. How we respond to that process is something else.
Of course I'm not saying that. I'm saying your expert in biology doesn't have an answer. He can tell you where this or that is true for the fetus, but not how to value it in relation to the point.
I'm rebutting that presumption by noting the best that we can do is just another way of arbitrarily assigning value and I've noted the inherent danger. The literal and demonstrable best we can do is protect the right at every point.
Otherwise we risk an overstep we aren't entitled to make.
You weren't reading me closely enough then, Greg. I just gave it to you again. Regardless of what we believe about that point of vestment, we know that at some point it exists and that at that point we have no right to abrogate it. The only way to then guarantee we don't do what we should not do and have no right to do is to refrain from interfering at every point and to protect the unborn at every point.
It's the only safeguard of right and protection against that overstep.
The problem is in assuming brain development controls the issue. It's not demonstrably so, only one way of valuing.
So if a woman believed her fetus wasn't a person, had no rights until it drew breath you wouldn't defend that fetus against her actions the day before she would give birth naturally? If your answer is that you would protect it then you make my point. The rest is simply degree.
I'm saying the only difference between any of us is where we draw the line. Past that drawing, when we recognize the human right, we are obligated to protect, to act.
If the fetus is human, with rights vested, we already agree (supra) no such right exists on the part of the mother. And if we understand that we cannot say where that right is established without imposing an arbitrary value (and who are we to do that to her or to the unborn) then we must protect the right itself by protecting the unborn who might possess it.
And there is no actual evidence establishing any point, so that appeal is wasted.
You're doing it again, Greg. You're deciding that consciousness is what defines our humanity and the point where right attaches. It isn't a logical necessity, only a valuation.
There is no real better here. That's rather the point. There's no authority that isn't itself inherently subjective.
Behavior - as in reactions, senses of pain and pleasure, emotion, personality, and so on.Doesn't behave like a human? If life begins at conception, then every event and action made by the zygote up until that "22 weeks" would be part of it behaving like a human.
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If she has a really good reason, yes. Not for convenience. In order to save her life, I would obviously ok it. Wouldn't you?
Is this also your "objective" opinion?
define "behave like a human"
You've seriously never heard of a situation where a pregnant mother had to have an emergency abortion because her life was in danger?Intentionally killing a baby doesn't save anyone's life.
Would you kill a newborn to save a woman's life?
Here's another fact: You said "living human being" above. That's not the same as a human organismThe "Sicko" part? That's my opinion. Totally subjective.
The fact that a zygote is an individual human organism?
No, that's not opinion at all. That's scientific fact.
Behavior - as in reactions, senses of pain and pleasure, emotion, personality, and so on.
Behavior - as in reactions, senses of pain and pleasure, emotion, personality, and so on.
You've seriously never heard of a situation where a pregnant mother had to have an emergency abortion because her life was in danger?
Here's another fact: You said "living human being" above. That's not the same as a human organism
Disappointing. I met you on a point for point with reason. You don't even return my position correctly. I'd suggest when you feel obliged to do this on some level you're beginning to recognize that your position is problematic.What this comes down to is that you are more comfortable inconveniencing the woman in order to preserve what could possibly be a human life (for which we have no concrete evidence), because you think it likely that it's already human........
Then you've abandoned the rational for another footing. Your comfort should have nothing to do with it. And the inarguable life is as arguably vested at any one point as another. What isn't arguable is your obligation to it at that point.And I'm more comfortable allowing the woman to rid herself of what could possibly be a human life (for which we have no concrete evidence), because I see no reason why it would be human yet
I know that!most of these exist to some degree among non-human organisms
many of them are absent in certain disease states
not sure they're all that useful in this kind of discussion :idunno:
To be perfectly honest, I've been answering the same questions on this thread for about a week, and having a long drawn out point-by-point debate with you on this sounds pretty awful.Disappointing. I met you on a point for point with reason. You don't even return my position correctly. I'd suggest when you feel obliged to do this on some level you're beginning to recognize that your position is problematic.
Points in rebuttal:
1. My "comfort" is no element of my argument. It's only a way to insinuate an ad hom in lieu.
2. Inconvenience (which seems a little trivial, oddly, in relation to the woman) cannot control right. It may be inconvenient of you to abide by the speed limit, but that's the nature of law and right. It restricts as well as protects and the two sometimes go hand in hand.
3. I at no point rested my argument on when "I think" the unborn is human. It doesn't matter when I believe that point to be. My argument functions to protect the right that may as well be as not at every point, which is rational given it as likely as not might exist at any point, demonstrably.
Then you've abandoned the rational for another footing. Your comfort should have nothing to do with it. And the inarguable life is as arguably vested at any one point as another. What isn't arguable is your obligation to it at that point.
And so my argument.
You don't kill it. You take it out and, often due to the trauma that caused the current situation, it's dead or incapacitated in some wayNope.
I've heard of the baby being removed, late-term, due to an emergency situation. But why kill the baby?
It's not. You insisting that it's so doesn't change that.Um... yes it is, dude.
I know that!
Humans exhibit them somewhat uniquely don't we? For example, our emotions can be read by our facial expressions. You know exactly what I mean. Quit getting bogged down in semantics
I made a fairly clear argument and just noted three points of divergence in your summary of it. Either you can answer them or you can't. The rest is up to you.To be perfectly honest, I've been answering the same questions on this thread for about a week, and having a long drawn out point-by-point debate with you on this sounds pretty awful.
If you want to go one question at a time, sure I'll do that. But I'm afraid that devoting more than an hour to a forum thread about abortion per day isn't something I want to participate in.
if we're trying to determine universal principles, they must apply universally, whether one is suffering from aphasia, or is unborn (but has brain development) or is at the prime of life or is deteriorating in old age
I can't answer on the unborn aphasia example as I need more information. If the fetus is just vegetative then I wouldn't consider it human. But if it has already been human and then has broken down to a lower level of consciousness, that person still receives full rights. You don't lose rights once you have them, unless you go to prison
I made a fairly clear argument and just noted three points of divergence in your summary of it. Either you can answer them or you can't. The rest is up to you.