A member of a species has to be an organism, taken as a whole, of that species — Bob Ross
This is circular.
This is basic biology. It is a member of the human species if it that certain kind of animal: homo sapien. — Bob Ross
Well, I wouldn't say that homo sapiens are single-celled animals.
When, for you, does an organism become a member of its species? — Bob Ross
How do you explain what it means to be a Homo sapiens?
Bob Ross has dragged the discussion back to essentialism again. "It's human, so you mustn't kill it", ignoring capital punishment and war and euthanasia. — Banno
All this is insubstantial in the argument I presented to you. We have on the one hand a woman, perhaps a nurse, perhaps a CEO, perhaps a sister, mother, daughter, perhaps a care giver or volunteer. Someone who can express their needs, who makes plans and seeks to fulfil them and who has a place in our world.
We have on the other hand, a group of cells.
That you value those cells over the person who must carry them is heinous.
That "exactly" is again a pointer to essentialism. What gives someone moral worth need not be a single characteristic or even a given group of characteristics. The rope is a rope despite no one thread running through it's whole length. There need be no essential common feature but instead a series of overlapping similarities. But when we stand back and consider what is before us, it is one rope.What exactly is the argument? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Considering this is one of the more fraught moral dilemmas of our time, I am not sure if "it just is, and if you don't agree there is nothing to say," is a particularly good argument. — Count Timothy von Icarus
It ought be the person carrying the blastocyst who has the main say in what to do with it.
When, for you, does an organism become a member of its species? Anything you say is going to be utterly arbitrary, if it is not conception. — Bob Ross
This is still circular logic. What makes one collection of cells and protoplasm a member of the human species? It is not merely the presence of a particular set of genes/chromosomes - there must be something else. — EricH
This is still circular logic. What makes one collection of cells and protoplasm a member of the human species? It is not merely the presence of a particular set of genes/chromosomes - there must be something else.
Being a human animal is all that is required to be a member of the human species. — NOS4A2
Everyday intuitions about moral agency are also limited by the status of a person. Children (especially) and young adults are treated with more lenience for behaving in a socially unacceptable manner and for committing moral wrongs, children's legal status is also different. People's status as an agent may change if they go into a permanent coma, we have next of kin rules, waivers, and even (arguably) the ability to extend our capacity for consent after our death with organ donation and wills. Moreover, unfertilised gametes and severed limbs are recognisably of the species homo sapiens and are not treated as moral persons - unless one is willing to admit that shagging, the normal functioning of fertilised ovums, menstruation and masturbation are each a peculiar brand of industrial slaughter.
Ok, then: A blastocyst is not a human being. The blastocyst is alive. It can be considered as a seperate entity - it might be moved to another host, for example. It has human DNA and so on, but it is no more a "member of the human species" than is your finger.
We have on the one hand a woman, perhaps a nurse, perhaps a CEO, perhaps a sister, mother, daughter, perhaps a care giver or volunteer.
Someone who can express their needs, who makes plans and seeks to fulfil them and who has a place in our world.
It's not true that all women who have sought abortions denied the humanity of what they were killing, and this is still true today.
"It's human, so you mustn't kill it",
ignoring capital punishment and war and euthanasia.
It does nto have the moral standing of the person carrying it.
This is still circular logic. What makes one collection of cells and protoplasm a member of the human species? It is not merely the presence of a particular set of genes/chromosomes - there must be something else.
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