So... then clearly a heart beat or a brain wave cannot be the objective determination for personhood.P.S. As for when personhood ends? I'm not sure it ever does.
So... then clearly a heart beat or a brain wave cannot be the objective determination for personhood.P.S. As for when personhood ends? I'm not sure it ever does.
Why do brain waves or a heart beat amount to personhood?
You have said... a heart beat or a brain wave are the things that determine personhood.
It's your "logic" not mine.
Clearly, based on Granite's behavior in this thread and by using his own logic.... Granite must not be a person because I see no evidence of brain waves.
I'd say personhood begins when God determines it begins. I dont think we have absolute proof when God considers a person a person. But we know for sure that it matters a whole lot and shouldnt be taken lightly.
I think a person should be considered a person at conception, because it matters if we kill people. AND just logically, I think when a human is a unique human, they ought to be considered a person.
No, the ball is in your court! Seriously the ball has been sitting there all morning.If you want to have an actual discussion, the ball's in your court.
Uh.... GuySmiley contradicted you and you say... "Very well put." :dizzy:Very well put.
I have an issue with identifying personhood with conception. I think the insistence on this can be taken to irrational extremes, frankly. But I do understand the sentiment. Just strikes me as over simplistic. When it comes to impacting certain forms of contraception and medical research the insistence on equating personhood with the instant of conception crosses the line from humanism into zealotry.
No. Heart activity or brain waves is the marker for the onset/existence of personhood, as far as I'm concerned. If we need a litmus test, this one seems undeniable, clean cut, and easy to confirm.
You have stated that brain waves or a heart beat are the things that you consider constitute a person.
I further made the point by asking you if a person is still a person during a medical procedure that requires stopping the heart beat.
You haven't responded (in any meaningful way) to either of those questions.
GuySmiley contradicted you...
Personhood begins when we can detect either a heart beat
Yes, a person's still a person if their heart stops beating.
Hello Hitler! :wave:It varies for some individuals, but I believe personhood begins to develop shortly after birth and is achieved somewhere in an infant's first or second year.
It sounds to me like you are making your choice based on the consequences though. You'd like to keep certain kinds of contraception available, so you'd like to define it as brain activity/heartbeat.Very well put.
I have an issue with identifying personhood with conception. I think the insistence on this can be taken to irrational extremes, frankly. But I do understand the sentiment. Just strikes me as over simplistic. When it comes to impacting certain forms of contraception and medical research the insistence on equating personhood with the instant of conception crosses the line from humanism into zealotry.
I'd disagree. There are other (legitimate) reasons to question personhood's onset right at conception. I don't want the door open to denying someone contraception, for example.
There are plenty of forms of contraception that do no involve killing a fetus.
:mock: Granite.