Belz...
Fiend God
Of course. Somebody is bound to argue that humans aren't viable anyway, because we all end up dead at some point. 
I've always heard it referred to as "thinking man." Or something like that... anyway, it was about definition, and not particularly pertinant, but an attempt to be witty by being overly literal. I suppose it failed.
Not true though, I can completely plan out in my mind the best way of acheiving the task like climbing onto my roof and putting something over the chimney without using any words at all. I don't even know the word for the stuff I am putting over the opening, but I don't need to since I have an image in my mind of what it is.I know what you mean... my mother is a special education consultant, so believe me, it's not through any hateful prejudice that I make that distinction.
However, the definition of "human" is directly linked to logic and thought -- which requires language. It is assumed by the roots of the word, itself.
I like this!Of course. Somebody is bound to argue that humans aren't viable anyway, because we all end up dead at some point.![]()
Nope.
My only take on the abortion issue has nothing to do with this idea.
My concern is.... where's the male right to have an abortion? We supposedly have the financial responsibility, whether there was any desire to actually have a child or not. The women have many options -- abortion, adoption, etc., but men have none, when the aforementioned financial responsibility is assumed.
This is not equal rights.
Does not the man also have the right to "abort the parasite?"
(added) Also note that I don't have any illegitamate children that I am aware of, so I have no direct personal interest in the concept.
Okay, to bring it back to what I was originally talking about, is it an individual human being from the point of conception? If so, why?
If it's not human, either philosophically or under the law, at the point of conception, when does it become human? At the end of the first trimester? At the end of the second? At no time prior to birth?
I have always felt viability was the most rational point to draw any line. Purely opinion of course. When the fetus can survive outside the body it can be classified as a person. Before that it is living in someone and off someone. A parasitic organism. It is a very complex teratoma. And if it is living in you and off you then it's you. And, as a part of you, it is up to you what happens to it.
I liked this post from this thread.
Whenever we as a society decide it does. There's no "right" answer here. There's merely a line to be drawn, and precisely where that line is drawn will be to some extent arbitrary. The extremes are it starts human and not until birth. We'll eventually settle somewhere in the middle of the two, with heavy discontent from both sides continuing ad infinitum.
A fetus is not quite a tumor. How many tumors develop into a separate human being?Biologically human. But so's a tumour.
A fetus is not quite a tumor. How many tumors develop into a separate human being?
Of course. Somebody is bound to argue that humans aren't viable anyway, because we all end up dead at some point.![]()
A fetus is not quite a tumor. How many tumors develop into a separate human being?
I like this!
Reminds of a saying in cardiology, "the only stable rhythm is asystole"![]()