You however, somewhat dogmatically imo, apparently don’t want to allow any time period at all for any such free choice, based only on an assumption that there simply never is a period from conception when a human person can be supposed not to yet exist.
Because from conception a new human does exist, whether you want to acknowledge it or not.
Acorns are not oak trees.
Couldn’t you relax your views just slightly so that an extant woman might not be deprived of the right to control what happens to her own body?
I otoh think that clearly there is and that denying such a choice would be being unnecessarily restrictive and dictatorial over the rights of an extant woman who may well have her own opinions.
If a woman is 7 months pregnant and wants to abort are you not being dogmatically and unnecessarily restrictive and dictatorial over her rights then? After all, she might have her own opinions.
No the state has that honour, my role in it is negligible, I have no official capacity or access to all the specific details of the pregnancy, and it’s basically none of my business. However as an individual if asked I may well hold an opinion that at some point it is too late to then decide not to be pregnant, and if society concurs then I have no problem with any such perceived inconvenience to the woman at that point.
Clearly society sets such restrictions not me, but after 8 months I can assume she has already had ample chances to choose and has imo made her own choice to go through with it.
What if she sincerely didn't know she was pregnant? It happens. You would see her forced to give birth with having ample time to make that choice?
Me? Probably yes since the foetus may well be viable independently anyway, it doesn’t even seem a borderline case. I at least don’t see a reason to dogmatically cling to one view which must then be applied throughout all pregnancies regardless; individual specific circumstances should always be considered imo.
The consensus of society has already made that choice in advance which I could have previously sought to change had I not agreed. This specific foetus has rights too.
Should it have rights and why should it; based on what criteria?
I never claimed it would be easy only that an opportunity not to gestate an unwanted pregnancy would typically be available even if you can suppose atypical scenarios such as above. Society’s rules aren’t always perfect and shouldn’t always be dogmatically applied without considering all the specific facts.
It’s really no good presenting me with a specific situation here when what I want all along is that each case should be considered on the individual specific facts not simply some dogmatic catch-all covering every stage in human reproduction after conception.
But that is not how law works. An abortion cannot be illegal based on age of the fetus but then legal because the mother to be was really poor or changed her mind or was raped, etc. Either that particular unborn human has rights or it does not.
I would expect a raped woman to consider a possible pregnancy as a matter of urgency. She may even want to take action simply ensure that she is not pregnant, whether it is known or not. Would you oppose that since she might after all be pregnant by the rapist?
The statuary law should be adequate in most cases and if it isn’t then it can be changed as people see it isn’t working. As things stand society seems to want to give rights to the foetus at 24 weeks. I don’t see any good biological reason for making it 0 weeks.
I don’t agree with using abortion as a form of contraception
But if a woman is in PP for her 7th elective abortion, you have no problem with that as long as she's doing it early? You may not personally agree but beyond that your personal judgement should carry no weight?
I don’t have any great fears for the unborn here, only that it seems a rather extravagant misuse of medical facilities or a sign of incompetence by the woman. There must be simpler and safer ways of her preventing pregnancy.
The CNS does not poof into existence. It is a period of development. So, let's test your standard.
At 40 days, brain waves are recordable. Should all abortion after 40 days be illegal?
At 13 to 16 weeks pain sensors are operative. Should abortion be illegal after 12 weeks or after 16?
What state of CNS development is required before you feel that the being possessing them should no longer be arbitrarily killed?
Yes but this has now moved beyond my initial argument. If you can now accept that there is even a small window of opportunity when it is reasonable to assume that an abortion need not affect an extant human person, then we can and should move on, but I suspect that is not the case.
The CNS is not my standard and does not define the subject matter. I posed those questions to you because it is at least a portion of your standard. Feel free to address them if you care to. :idunno:
The CNS could define it for you if the possibility of when a person is capable of existing seemed as reasonable a position to you as it does for me. I would discuss that if you agreed that without a CNS there really isn’t anything more than a potential human (being?) and a morally far superior window of opportunity for a woman to choose not to be pregnant than after say 24 weeks.
You asked me why I thought zygotes were expendable; I didn’t want to go back to my hobby horse because I thought it was understood. Clearly imo zygotes routinely fail,
And people routinely die. Does that make the ones that do not expendable? Your argument is a non sequitur.
No it isn’t, the point is that people as a rule live before they die, that is the expected norm while it is more normal that zygotes will die, most just are expendable. Are we now allowed to talk about people (persons) now it suits you?
there seems to be no point in worrying or being sentimental over the seeds of life
Sperm and egg are the "seeds of life". Once they combine we are dealing with a new human life.
I think if you check seeds generally come along after fertilisation.