X is innocent and Y is a dirty slut."I think X should have more rights than Y"
"Why do you value X over Y?"
"I don't. I'm only saying that X should have rights, and not Y. Why do you not understand that I don't value one over the other, I just think one should have rights, and not the other."
Well you did argue the the embryo/zygote was part of the mother and not a separate lifeform.
well we will just have to disagree. I don't think your mother every owned you. She was mother, your parent, but not your owner.
X is innocent and Y is a dirty slut.
"X" is innocent, no doubt. "Y" may be a dirty slut. We don't have enough data to make a determination, yet.
"X" is innocent, no doubt. "Y" may be a dirty slut. We don't have enough data to make a determination, yet.
You were promoting biblical principals at some time. So are you disputing whether it was the father that had the ownership rights, per the Bible? And that he didn't cease to own her at birth, but rather that he owned under he sold to a willing buyer? What exactly is your point here?So you think your mother owned you at one point? okay.
It's not that far fetched:
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/imagehosting/7166961562e171fdec.jpg[/qimg]
How about we start here when it comes to abortion? Any idea of what we might do to fix this problem?
https://www.cdc.gov/reproductivehealth/contraception/unintendedpregnancy/index.htm
What do you figure the solution is? Relaxing abortion laws further? Maybe a Pro-Choice march? Where should the main focus really be? Certainly anywhere but responsible behavior, right?
What's your solution?
More education, more access to free birth control, more community outreach? I mean, that is all I can think of, to start.
Of course I would also like to see a greater emphasis put on responsible behavior and personal accountability. But I don't know exactly how to make that happen. Sadly, that ship may have sailed.
Obviously nobody wants to have an abortion, at the end of the day. But, without a greater focus on the above mentioned, things are not likely to change much. Relaxing abortion law and focusing on freedoms is not going to help matters in the long run, imo.
Yet in the countries with 'relaxed' abortion laws the spectre of abortion-as-birth-control simply does not exist to the extent suggested by the posters here.
So basically a greater prominence & promotion of organizations such as Planned Parenthood?More education, more access to free birth control, more community outreach? I mean, that is all I can think of, to start.
Of course I would also like to see a greater emphasis put on responsible behavior and personal accountability. But I don't know exactly how to make that happen. Sadly, that ship may have sailed.
Obviously nobody wants to have an abortion, at the end of the day. But, without a greater focus on the above mentioned, things are not likely to change much.
Relaxing abortion law and focusing on freedoms is not going to help matters in the long run, imo.
Second, numerous people promoted the "parasite" idea over multiple pages. The mods can easily verify this.
We shall see.While I think it is sometimes crucial to be clear about what words mean, I will do my best not to bash a dictionary, much less be angry while doing it. ; )
You can semanticize all the distinctions away until there is no difference between a human being and a rock. That doesn't change the fact that only a fertilized ovum will develop into a distinct human being (identical twins not withstanding).I specifically brought up a separate personhood (or whatever you want to call it) from each other - that is, why aren't they considered to be the same person? My answer is that it's not really unique DNA, it's being literally separate physical entities.
I wasn't saying whether it was part of the mother, merely whether it was *separate* from the mother (separate, by the way, is the term you used originally).
Oooooh!!!! What happens with conjoined twins, then?!
There are difficulties **all around** so we might want to give up the notion that we can make clear, clean judgments. Reality doesn't seem to be cooperating.
We shall see.
You can semanticize all the distinctions away until there is no difference between a human being and a rock. That doesn't change the fact that only a fertilized ovum will develop into a distinct human being (identical twins not withstanding).
It is perfectly valid to say that this does not give a zygote any rights whatsoever (including the right to life).
However, to say that this is an artificial or arbitrary distinction and the same arguments can equally be applied to sperm or cancer cells reeks of desperation.
Seriously? You expect me to list all of the caveats that might apply to the growth and development of a zygote then accuse me of pretending that words can mean anything?This is not semantics. A sperm sometimes will develop into a "distinct human being". A zygote may develop into a "distinct human being". A zygote may develop into more than one distinct human beings. More than one zygote may develop into a single distinct human being. A zygote may develop into nothing at all (it happens very often). A zygote may develop into a cancerous growth that will kill the mother (if left unchecked).
These are not issues of word definitions. Pretending that words can mean anything is what you do.
How about we start here when it comes to abortion? Any idea of what we might do to fix this problem?
https://www.cdc.gov/reproductivehealth/contraception/unintendedpregnancy/index.htm
What do you figure the solution is? Relaxing abortion laws further? Maybe a Pro-Choice march? Where should the main focus really be? Certainly anywhere but responsible behavior, right?
That is, as you say, rather problematic for the god-botherers. Typically monozygotic twins split into two (or more) after conception, so ensoulment at conception requires the soul to split or one twin to lack a soul. Given the lack of doctrinal support for 'soul splitting' this is rather awkward.Also, to add to my previous post, when we have conjoined twins we have what used to be a single fertilization event and a single person (according to those folk who see personhood, by whatever name, happening at conception) remaining as a single body, of sorts. Nevertheless, we have the contradiction here that (almost?) everyone would recognize such conjoined twins as two separate individuals (at least when we are seeing two brains).