So you are saying that if we say a human begins at conception, we will be confused that every cell in a human may also be a human. Interesting.They have human DNA just like a zygote. They CAME from a human being, they are both alive.
Right. So an egg is not a human, and a zygote is a developing human.An egg is missing a piece to enable it to develop, that is all. A zygote is just an egg that has all the information it needs to develop.
Of course. Do you want to use 2 biological functions to decide which humans are people? And that arbitrary measure is all we use to assign humanity?The problem is using this standard you'll classify human beings PURELY based on biology and their DNA structure. Is that all you use to assign humanity?
This is curious. What is done in the case of a molar pregnancy?If a law is written that simply says "personhood begins at conception", there's no way to tell between an actual embryo and a molar pregnancy...
We save both the baby and the mom. There you go. Now you know, whenever you are temped to ask this question, what the answer is. We both realize that at present we can't save the baby, but as technology increases we learn to save all kinds of people that we couldn't save before.... or to decide what to do in the case of an ectopic pregnancy.
Besides the problems you just cited, are there any others? Both of those were so easy to answer as to be trivial. I imagine any other problem you cite will be even more trivial.You introduce all kinds of problems by using this definition, then you have to go back and try to make exceptions for the biologically ignorant standard you've set up.
Really? An ant that you've admitted you aren't sure is a person or not?No, more like I'm not going to flip out if someone happens to accidentally step on an ant that you've determined has a right to life.
As inferred here, the solutions to the problems you say we have are not draconian.I am not advocating that it is necessarily a good idea to purposefully destroy zygotes or blastocysts. However, I'm not going to deny women the pill or other hormonal contraceptives on the off chance that maybe a zygote that could have implanted and developed, won't. I'm not going to tell couples with frozen embryos or at IVF clinics that they, by law MUST implant every embryo they generate. I wouldn't be against better regulations on numbers of embryos that are generated, however. Nor am I against "embryo donation" for couples that want to do such things with their embryos. If they want to donate them to stem cell research, they should be free to do so.
If planned parenthood restricts themselves, I won't stop them. But I won't stop fighting for the lives of all pre-born humans, either.I think surgical abortions in general are a bad thing, but I doubt you can get restrictions before the second trimester (heartbeat and brainwaves start about halfway through the first trimester). But I would be happy with such a restriction, rather than the nothing that we have now.
I won't stop showing you that supporting murder, even if you aren't sure, is a bad position to take.I'm not fighting you, I'm merely posting on forums in disagreement with your position. If I were FIGHTING this proposal I'd be donating money, be out in the streets holding up signs etc in opposition.
I know you've already lost in the court of public opinion, nor would I feel that it was worth my time to stand on street corners fighting you. I was hoping to direct your efforts to something actually useful. But its quite clear you have an unwavering position, which I still believe is misguided and a waste of your time.
The problem is you're using terminology that is not at all precise. We could confuse human cells for human individuals, since the only difference between an adult human cell and a zygote is the "switches" being on for embryonic development in the zygote. We can already induce any human body cell to become an embryonic stem cell line. In mice those cells can become part of a viable embryo. (Obviously we can't do that experiment with a person)So you are saying that if we say a human begins at conception, we will be confused that every cell in a human may also be a human. Interesting.
An egg is a human cell. Every human being started as an egg cell before fertilization.Right. So an egg is not a human, and a zygote is a developing human.
Assigning personhood to something that may or may not develop into something the rest of us would call a person is also, arbitrary.Of course. Do you want to use 2 biological functions to decide which humans are people? And that arbitrary measure is all we use to assign humanity?
Surgical removal, i.e. abortion. Plus you need monitoring and possible chemotherapy in case it turns into chorionic carcinoma (a cancer that results from a fertilized egg gone wrong).This is curious. What is done in the case of a molar pregnancy?
And that helps us figure out how to write the law RIGHT NOW, how exactly?We save both the baby and the mom. There you go. Now you know, whenever you are temped to ask this question, what the answer is. We both realize that at present we can't save the baby, but as technology increases we learn to save all kinds of people that we couldn't save before.
You're a moron to trivialize the second. There is no "saving both" in nearly every situation where surgical intervention is warranted. The problem is, the intertwined blood vessels are almost impossible to remove completely safely for either party. Simple appeals to technology are moronic on your part.Besides the problems you just cited, are there any others? Both of those were so easy to answer as to be trivial. I imagine any other problem you cite will be even more trivial.
Planned Parenthood isn't interested in restrictions, but the public at large IS. Now is the time to take advantage of public sentiment, drop the extremist requirements (which is how MOST people view "zygotes are people") and you can get something actually done.If planned parenthood restricts themselves, I won't stop them. But I won't stop fighting for the lives of all pre-born humans, either.
The problem is, YOU are supporting murder by going after a standard that will never be enacted.I won't stop showing you that supporting murder, even if you aren't sure, is a bad position to take.
Yeah, good point. How do biology textbooks avoid this?The problem is you're using terminology that is not at all precise. We could confuse human cells for human individuals,
And you call me imprecise! :darwinsm:An egg is a human cell. Every human being started as an egg cell before fertilization.
Saying we can't figure out the time when a particular individual started is moronic.Assigning personhood to something that may or may not develop into something the rest of us would call a person is also, arbitrary.
Oh my! If we just would just say that some humans aren't people, molar pregnancies would be a thing of the past. Those in the personhood movement - barbarians!Surgical removal, i.e. abortion. Plus you need monitoring and possible chemotherapy in case it turns into chorionic carcinoma (a cancer that results from a fertilized egg gone wrong).
What are you talking about? That we might confuse a doctor removing an ectopic pregnancy for a murderer?And that helps us figure out how to write the law RIGHT NOW, how exactly?
Appeal to technology is a pretty safe bet. Technology has been advancing steadily for a long time.You're a moron to trivialize the second. There is no "saving both" in nearly every situation where surgical intervention is warranted. The problem is, the intertwined blood vessels are almost impossible to remove completely safely for either party. Simple appeals to technology are moronic on your part.
But, as I've pointed out, it will backfire on you as soon as people in power realize that when you declare some humans are not people, that all humans are at risk of being declared not people.Planned Parenthood isn't interested in restrictions, but the public at large IS. Now is the time to take advantage of public sentiment, drop the extremist requirements (which is how MOST people view "zygotes are people") and you can get something actually done.
I'm not responsible for the women and their doctors that conspire to kill their children. I won't be responsible for the back-alley abortions that might happen after a law like this is passed.The problem is, YOU are supporting murder by going after a standard that will never be enacted.
No, but if I stand for a standard that says "catch the pregnancy soon enough and you can kill the baby"; that would be wrong.While we argue over when EXACTLY life begins (we differ by a week at most) babies are being killed, are you blind to this fact?
I'm not responsible for the women and their doctors that conspire to kill their children. I won't be responsible for the back-alley abortions that might happen after a law like this is passed.
No, but if I stand for a standard that says "catch the pregnancy soon enough and you can kill the baby"; that would be wrong.