This boils down, of course, to what we think we're protecting. And this another example of religion overreaching under some misguided sense of morality.
Not my argument, which is about vesting. I was setting the larger table of discussion. The argument remains about a right and where we can or should vest or divest it.
Put another way, we're stuck in a situation where a pair of cells are worth more than curing Parkinson's.
No. You'd have to assume that the only way to cure Parkinson's would be with stem cells and, even less established, stem cells that could only be obtained via an aborted fetus. But even were that demonstrably true it wouldn't control any more than an argument that I could save a handful of lives with organ transplants by taking yours would be a justification for doing so. Of course you have the inarguable right for protection...which only underscores how important it is we get that right's vestment correctly and why you'd likely not find yourself voting with the "let's divest whole cloth" side of the rational alternative to an application of the law's principle set out prior...whew...
This isn't a comparison that's made; it's an equation.
It's a comparison of value, since you declare the child's interests superior to the zygote's.
Incorrect--we simply set a standard at odds with your own, which I already suggested: the presence of brain activity and or heart beat. Once the standard exists, consistency follows.
That actually doesn't justify your "incorrect" given I'm not advancing a standard for determining the point of vestment, but arguing the rationally inescapable conclusion if we want to avoid an arbitrary assertion of right and one that we couldn't sustain attempting it from the other end of things AND because your assignment of value (whether or not you hold a majority position) isn't anything more or less than that very arbitrary thing my posit avoids.
Including your own, TH. Stop trying to act as though your own standard is anything less than an arbitrary.
Rather, demonstrate how it is or leave off declaring it to be what it demonstrably isn't.
Your argument essentially boils down to erring on the side of caution.
No, though I can understand how you'd see it that way. My side says that if I have a right and you can't demonstrate the cessation of it without the application of an arbitrary valuation, then the law would forbid it. That same reasoned progression and the same want for standard should be and must be mirrored in addressing the fetus.
...I don't think we can separate self-preservation (which you seem to resting on) from emotion.
Of course we can. Philosophers have done it for centuries as a matter of argument. Self preservation inarguably has emotional weight, but it can be and is a rational thing at the root. Without being no right matters. To preserve my being is to preserve all, after a fashion....or, to put it another way, without being the argument isn't.
What's rational about guaranteeing suffering?
Depends. I can think of any number of illustrations justifying suffering. So could you, I imagine. Or would you fail to suffer to preserve the life of your child, by way of example...of course you wouldn't. Else and in our wider discourse, my argument isn't about or for guaranteeing suffering.
Where is the rationality behind the perpetuation of agony and disease? When it's within one's power to stop harm and one chooses not to, what do we generally call this kind of choice?
I know what I generally call this sort of argument: an appeal to emotion. And much, if not all of it, rests on supposition. I set that out in my last and earlier here.
So religion does not inform your opinion on this issue at all? Serious question.
No. I have a moral argument. I have a purely religious argument that is different from either, but this doesn't rest in any part on it. Now as I believe that all truth serves the good you could make a tangential connection, but again, this is an argument I could have felt at ease with as an atheist. And I'd bet some will or do who still hold that belief/context.
I would agree. Where we differ is of course on the timing.
But we really don't, insomuch as the argument stands. What I mean is, you have a particular notion about where the point should vest. Within the context of my argument I don't. I only know that my right has vested and that it should only be abrogated, traveling back along my chain of being, by the mechanisms we allow: due process following a fundamental violation of the compact on my part. And that can't be done here. Or, viewed another way, you could say I honor every single subjective belief save the belief that would negate the right entire--while holding out the rationality of doing that, of course.
Re: the first thing we do...
That all depends. You are, after all, an attorney.:chuckle:
:think: There might be a general exception allowed there.
I have no idea where you got this idea. You seem to be referring to euthanasia. That, or Benjamin Button.
:chuckle: It's an illustration of my argument of the deficiency in any advancing argument against the larger vesting. Or at least illustrates that the arbitrary application is hypocritical and violative of the law's context/principles. And so my argument, challenge, and conclusion.
The alternative is to defend an object lacking in every single characteristic you just described and invest it with the inalienable rights of those who suffering the object may alleviate.
You did it again. You spoke of investing. That's rather the issue. It is as arguably vested at every point as divested or vested at any. And that's the thorny problem for anyone in support of abrogating my right (a-la Buttons) or failing to vest at every point.
All this in the name of a standard that's acceptable to you because it lacks exceptions and is universal.
All this because I haven't seen another reasoned course, though I did hold that there are two sides to my argument, however uncomfortable the other might be. We could all divest. That would follow the same principle while eliminating the right. Not much of a stable compact, I'm guessing, but it's possible.
You just agreed a zygote's a "child," TH. Why not just wear the shoe that fits?
No, I just pointed out that a fundamentalist (which I'm not) pointing and declaring you a child killer would be doing the thing you're doing, whatever the right of it, which is playing an emotional card.
You want my opinion I can give you that. This is a different animal. And that animal is wholly reasoned and invites examination on its points.
What I did were provide specific examples of the real, tangible harm that stems from an outlook such as yours.
I answered you on the disease gambit. You can't establish the either/or that is necessary for it to be an inarguable consideration.
And you continue to blithely dismiss these concerns to emotion as though a desire to relieve human suffering is somehow beneath all of us.
Nothing blithe in my rejection of emotion as the standard for gauging right. That way lies madness, interment camps, caste systems and every measure of human misery at the hands of humanity.