Except that we give rights to persons not to DNA.Once a being is determined to be human, it is empowered with a right to live. This right to live is not diminished by their condition.
Except that we give rights to persons not to DNA.Once a being is determined to be human, it is empowered with a right to live. This right to live is not diminished by their condition.
Well, I would say the vast majority of the girls kept the babies because they felt doing otherwise was sinning, and their families and friends confirmed that belief.
I don't.I think the problem with this argument is that we still consider the killing of someone who does not reflect these properties to be murder.
Well, if he's not coming out of it, and has no brain function while in it, why shouldn't we? The person that we care about is already dead.For example, simply because a man is in a coma does not mean that we are free to kill him.
Not likely. Most people who are mentally challenged are still capalbe of enjoying life. Of feeling pain. Of making decisions.The same would be true for someone who is mentally challenged.
Why?Once a being is determined to be human, it is empowered with a right to live.
Why not? Please demonstrate consistency with your earlier statements.The response is no.
I surf at work too. Right now I have to drastically limit the number of threads I get involved in for fear of not being able to cover responses in more than a few.I usually surf here at work, so for the time being, no. Perhaps you should look again at why I posted that in the first place- it was the other side of the coin to someones non logical emotional reaction to abortion. I posted from home for that.
There are plenty of good logical arguments against abortion, but the post wasnt really made as an argument so much as to show the other side of examining the situation emotionally. Man A doesnt like abortion because the result of a pregnancy he participated in was beautiful and all that good stuff parents always say, and I had the opposite experience. I saw the negetive results that pregnancies can have.
If they asked for neither outcome, then it doesn't follow that you can argue for just one outcome and suggest that the one you choose is in the best interest of the fetus, solely on the basis that they did not ask for the other one.I saw the 'they didnt ask to be mercy killed' comment, they didnt ask NOT to be either. deal.
If they asked for neither outcome, then it doesn't follow that you can argue for just one outcome and suggest that the one you choose is in the best interest of the fetus, solely on the basis that they did not ask for the other one.
You imply in the post that certain things are in the fetus' best interest. Maybe you don't actually mean to. However—that's what I want to challenge.
No. Thought I do argue that being born (into whatever circumstances) is virtually always more in a fetus' interest than not being born. I would say "always" but have not done exhaustive thought experiments about this.Isnt it you who is arguing for one outcome??
[ETA: Wait—you can't think of a reason? A woman can of course decide to have an abortion because it is in her interest and patently not in the interest of the child. There is nothing automatic whereby "her interest" = "the child's interest"]I cant think of a reason a woman would have an abortion besides it being in the best interest of the fetus (not enough money, drug use, mental illness, abusive fathers, etc, etc).
Again, I think it is better than the alternative—for the child.I just wanted to point out that not all things are fluffy and wonderful when people have children. Someitmes it turns out like crap. different options are good for different people, and I think a society that respects that would be beneficial to children.
Kids dont ask to be born, I dont think they deserve to be born to parents who dont want to care for them.
Why not? Please demonstrate consistency with your earlier statements.
You're missing my point. If sapience is still a factor, it is working against you as even a 13 month old infant is not sapient. It is unable to have a sense of judgement.Puhleaze. Stop building a strawman of my position. I never said a fetus isn't human. Also, a 13 month old infant is not directly dependant on a host mother.
Yes, sapience is still a factor, one of a few that I've factored into my opinion.
Always should be allowed. A fetus is not an individual being and is more akin to being a parasite than a person.
You're backpedaling here to avoid the question. And again, even a 13 month old infant is not a sapient being.No one has argued, at any point, that the fetus isn't human. Try again.
It was always human, just not an independant, sapient being.
Non sequitur.Except that we give rights to persons not to DNA.
But a fetus' condition is not permanent either. One day, that fetus may become an infant.Well, if he's not coming out of it, and has no brain function while in it, why shouldn't we? The person that we care about is already dead.
If he may come out of it, however, that's another issue entirely. It's no different from a person being asleep.
And I think that the chance that the person could come out of the coma is usually what motivates us not keep their bodies alive in the meantime.
I'll agree with that.Not likely. Most people who are mentally challenged are still capalbe of enjoying life. Of feeling pain. Of making decisions.
There are some rights that I might think we should deny them, (we'd have to look at this on a case by case basis of course, and it isn't worth getting in to here), but the right to life isn't one.
The mind of a mentally challenged person is far more developed that that of any fetus.
I'm not sure if I understand what you mean by this. The UN's Universal Declaration of Human Rights goes through a number or reasons.Why?
It does not demonstrate consistency to contradict yourself and then say "that's just one of the factors I look at".
You said (a lot of times) that it is "not a complicated issue at all". Now you are equivocating on your earlier clarity. Dependency is one factor. Sapience is one factor. It's not a human being until it is separate from its mother, but you cannot terminate a baby outside the womb yet not yet separated from its mother.
To me it appears that you are discovering complications.
You're missing my point. If sapience is still a factor, it is working against you as even a 13 month old infant is not sapient. It is unable to have a sense of judgement.
If you're unable to make yourself clear, that's not my problem.
You're backpedaling here to avoid the question. And again, even a 13 month old infant is not a sapient being.
So theoretically, we could perform a Cesarean section, remove the fetus and have it become an individual being, then reinsert the fetus into the womb and take away its individuality?
Considering the stipulation that the fetus was old enough to survive outside the womb, does this now make it an indvidual being?
Herewith—Please tell me how I contradicted myself.
[Abortion] Always should be allowed. A fetus is not an individual being and is more akin to being a parasite than a person.
If we define an individual being as a sentient person who can live without a host body, then the fetus is not an individual being. A fetus is not an individual being.
I'm saying that it's ok to have an abortion because the fetus is INSIDE the womb. It's a growth, an organism that is still part of the host body. Thus, the host body has every right to terminate it.
Yes. It's at birth.bob_kark said:So there's a certain level of dependence at which it suddenly becomes a human being in your eyes?Only after it's seperated from the mother.bob_kark said:What of a fetus that could survive on its own outside the womb? Is that a human being?
Right . . . so as long as you have not cut the umbilicus yet (and the placenta is still part of the mother's body)—you can smack the baby over the head with a griddle pan a few times if it's not pretty enough?
Your "No" appears to me to contradict your preceding. Why "No"? If you find the method of termination unpalatable, switch it for a lethal injection. In your view—given what you've said—why does the mother not have every right to terminate a baby in this scenario?The response is no.