right-to-life principles, for instance that a human being in its earliest development deserves a chance to live. — NOS4A2
We know that an individual human lifecycle begins at conception, since it cannot begin anywhere else, and any scalpel through the spine or intentional deprivation of essential nutrients after this point is to kill an individual human being. — NOS4A2
That’s why the evasions about whether the fetus has feelings or if it is biologically inhuman serve only to cast doubt on the humanity of this being in its earliest stages, to dehumanize it, making the abnegation of any right-to-life principle an easier pill to swallow for those who wish to see it eviscerated with sheers. If you extend this depravity to a different point along the human life continuum, you can see the same arguments used to justify genocide and murder. — NOS4A2
I don’t think any of this means we should prohibit abortion. Infanticide is a historical fact. Females often kill or abandon their offspring throughout the animal kingdom. Perhaps we should make humane options available. But it is surely nothing to be proud of. — NOS4A2
That's begging the question though. The whole problem is that you have to assume that human beings are around as disembodied souls waiting to exist for that argument to make sense.
And that is definitely a religious position.
This is a kind of intellectual sleight of hand. You're starting with a biological description (using descriptive concepts such as "lifecycle") and you want us to conclude from your phrasing ("to kill an individual human being") a moral judgement. But you haven't justified the judgement on its own terms.
So if it's not about feelings or anything else biological, what is it about? Why do we care? What's the humanist principle for?
That's poisoning the well. You're falsely insinuating that your opposition is "proud of" abortion.
Why would anyone need to assume that? — NOS4A2
I start at the principle “a human being in its earliest development deserves a chance to live”. Given the helplessness of a human being in his early development, such a principle seems to me imperative. Any subsequent moral judgements proceed from this one. — NOS4A2
Exactly. Why do you care or not? You either believe human beings in their earliest development deserves a chance to live, to be protected, or you do not. — NOS4A2
Abortion rights is often posited as a mark of an enlightened society, when in fact infanticide, child sacrifice, and acts of these sorts is a stone age and barbaric practice. — NOS4A2
But one of the challenges the pro-choice advocate faces is explaining the dividing line between killable and not-killable. When and how does that transition take place? — frank
P1. It is wrong to kill a baby the day after birth.
The argument would then be:
P2. If it is wrong to kill a baby the day after birth then it is wrong to kill a baby the day before birth.
C1. Therefore, it is wrong to kill a baby the day before birth.
P3. If it is wrong to kill a baby the day before birth then it is wrong to kill a baby two days before birth.
C2. Therefore, it is wrong to kill a baby two days before birth.
...
etc.
This line of reasoning will entail the conclusion that it is wrong to kill a baby from the moment of conception. — Michael
But one of the challenges the pro-choice advocate faces is explaining the dividing line between killable and not-killable. When and how does that transition take place? — frank
What else would a "human being in it's earlierst development" refer to?
It cannot refer to the actual person that eventually forms after birth, as that person doesn't exist. So it could only refer to their "soul", which somehow already represents the person.
Really? That is how your morality works? Just a coinflip where you either happen to believe something or don't?
Again your non-religious morality sounds awfully like a religion. Why do we respect people's rights to life and liberty? Because we recognise ourselves in them. We recognise that every individual is valuable in themselves and we can never replace one with another, so the only reasonable rule is to protect all as much as possible.
The problem is, this reasoning doesn't apply to "theoretical people". Individuals are valuable for what they are, not what they might be.
That is to say, one must be willing to 'deal with' a possible pregnancy in a moral way if one engages in sexual activity. — Chet Hawkins
I agree with her that there is clearly an immoral pattern of irresponsible behavior there. So, liars and the uncaring need to be called to task for such things. — Chet Hawkins
It refers to the earliest stages of every human being that ever existed. There is no biological evidence that a soul or “actual person” forms at any point during the lifecycle. That’s your assumption. — NOS4A2
Not a coin flip. I pointed out that most parents feel the force of this principle, and the evidence is that an unfathomable amount of parents do indeed carry and care for human beings in the earliest stages of development, up until and including incubating them in their own bodies. — NOS4A2
You do recognize that you were once a fetus, I assume. At no point in your life were you theoretical after conception. That’s utter nonsense, I’m afraid. — NOS4A2
So, if no actual person forms, then how does morality come into it at all?
So, argumentum ad populum?
I don't know whether I was ever a fetus. I have no memories of existing prior to birth (as I understand most people do not), and I don't know any other way to establish whether I existed at some point.
"I" am neither my cells nor my DNA.
I don’t know what an “actual person” is. What I do know is that a human being forms, and that morality ought to concern human beings. — NOS4A2
Biology and anthropology. What is your basis? — NOS4A2
Why do we respect people's rights to life and liberty? Because we recognise ourselves in them. We recognise that every individual is valuable in themselves and we can never replace one with another, so the only reasonable rule is to protect all as much as possible. — Echarmion
Everyone knows, actually. It is an irrefutable fact that you were a fetus. — NOS4A2
But there you have it. You are not your cells nor your DNA. Then what are you? A soul? — NOS4A2
Murder is unlawful killing. It's not murder if abortion is legal. — Banno
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