Will the fetus never gain brain function? That is where your parallel fails.
Let's say a person is in a coma, but it is expected that they will come out of it with pretty much normal brain functioning. Okay to end their life?
How is that different from a fetus that has no detectable brain function, but is expected to develop one in a few weeks?
Let's say a person is in a coma, but it is unknown if they will come out of it with pretty much normal brain functioning. Okay to end their life?
How is that different from a fetus that has no detectable brain function, but is expected to develop one in a few weeks?
My response to that would have been:I thought the question may have been on the lines of
Have you considered it may have been your mother deciding to abort you?
I thought the question may have been on the lines of
Have you considered it may have been your mother deciding to abort you?
Well then do identify it so that we can discuss.Pretty sure there's at least one in there...at least.
Of course there are differences. The embryo will have a functioning brain at some point. One of the arguments that Comfort uses is that it is ethically challenging to try to figure out where to draw the line, and therefore we should err on the side of caution--If there is a chance someone is alive in the building should we still implode it...But a person in a coma has brain function, so the comparison is invalid.
If a baby means a newborn, then yes, that's implied by what I said.If that's the case, then a baby doesn't really have any right to live either, right?
I don't think it's that easy, no. For one thing, the cost of that equipment and hospital time is a valid consideration, given that the money spent there could go to save other lives.Or are you saying that if a fetus can survive with equipment outside the womb, and the woman doesn't want to have a baby, then doctors should remove the fetus and put it on life support if necessary?
I'm aware that you were expressing your opinion. I am saying that I disagree with it. I'm not suggesting that I am going to do anything about that, except to tell you why I disagree.And I'm not here to tell you what to think.
I was very clear: I spoke about what I think.
Okay, I disagree. It's quite clear to me that you've pointed out one important aspect of the issue: the rights of a woman to control her own reproduction. But if you are interested in making moral decisions (I'm not saying "right or wrong", only "decisions regarding morality), then you have completely failed to take into account one possible complicating factor: the rights of the fetus.My reproduction is none of your business.
That of other women is none of mine.
Not once in there did I tell anyone else how he or she should feel, or what he or she should think about the issue.
Only to point out that if a woman's right reproduction to control her reproduction is more important than any other issues, it is so because of the facts of development, and not because those facts don't need to be considered at all.What's the point of this impossible hypothetical? What bearing can it possibly have on reality?
Which means that we do need to take into consideration how development actually works in humans and can't simply say "a woman's reproduction is her own concern".Yes, if pregnancy were different, then our responses to it would likely be different.
Address it. Be my guest. I never told you how to feel or what to think on this issue. I said only two things, and they brook no argument:
You've no business in my reproductive rights.
I've no business in anyone else's.
Not for you to chew on, no. I saw what you did with, "So according to you killing a preschooler is ok if the parents are for it since they don't comprehend death?"
So according to you killing a preschooler is ok if the parents are for it since they don't comprehend death?
There is univeral agreement that preschool children lack understanding of each of these sub-components of death. They say that dead people can come back to life, they think that dead people talk and dream, they say not all people die, and they offer distal causes as the causes of death - accidents, poison, guns.
Well then do identify it so that we can discuss.
Of course there are differences. The embryo will have a functioning brain at some point. One of the arguments that Comfort uses is that it is ethically challenging to try to figure out where to draw the line, and therefore we should err on the side of caution--If there is a chance someone is alive in the building should we still implode it...
Thanks for that post slingblade. I don't agree with all of it, but I agree with a great deal of it, and at least I think I understand where you're coming from.
If I were more concerned with debating the minutia of the topic, I'd probably try to address those parts that I disagree with, but, considering that there was only one single sentence that bothered me, and our conclusions are mostly the same, (even the not knowing part), well, I'm happy to say thanks for a well written post.![]()
Are you claiming Comfort's pro-life arguments are logical fallacies?
Well, yes. Mostly Appeal to Emotion. I already said so on the first page of this thread.
I'm sure those who actually made it into the "film" were carefully selected. I wonder what happened to the interviews that weren't included?There's one person who had never heard of Hitler, and another who thought he was a communist. I'm not sure how hard it is to string people like that along and get them to agree with fallacies.
And I still don't get the emotional connection that the movie is trying to make.
That abortion is like the holocaust, like Nazis mass murdering Jews?
So fetuses that are aborted are supposed to be the equivalent to Jews during the Holocaust?
...really?
Once again, that's like saying "Apples are good for you and taste good and are red. Stop signs are red and they do good too, so you should eat both."
I'm sorry, I still don't see the correlation that supposed to make me do an "180".
And that is why you are a nazi murdering baby!!