An actual person is an actual person. Someone you can meet and talk to, and who responds.
Morality ought to concern persons, subjects. I don't see how their species would be relevant.
"Everyone knows" is not an argument. I gave you the reasoning, I trust you're capable of understanding it.
That's one way of putting it. Though I'm an embodied soul, whose existence is measurable. "Soul" often implies something esoteric, but I don't mean to imply that anything mystic is going on. Merely that "I" am formed from a connection of a body, some kind of cognitive process and memories.
A clump of cells would not be me even if it shared my DNA. If you made an exact copy of me, that copy would cease to be me the moment it added it's own experiences.
I don't think any of this is very complicated in principle.
By all means, may 'merca have a sane ethical and political discussion, without divine intervention. — Banno
And how so? Have you read it? It seems to me well-legged on history of law, balance of concerns for health of the mother and at approximately quickening/viability the health of the unborn child, and implied constitutional rights to privacy and bodily autonomy. And explicit law is a bad idea, except perhaps for frogs that might want such a thing, but as was said to them more than two millennia ago, "be careful what you wish for!"I agree the Roe-Wade decision was a pretty poor basis for such things. — Banno
Quite overwhelmingly, professional philosophers are in favour of abortion on demand in the first trimester.Abortion (first trimester, no special circumstances): permissible or impermissible?
Yep. Also Dobbs. v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization. Implied rights are not so firm, as recent history demonstrates:Have you read it? — tim wood
We hold that Roe and Casey must be overruled. The Constitution makes no reference to abortion, and no such right is implicitly protected by any constitutional provision, including the one on which the defenders of Roe and Casey now chiefly rely — the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. — Alto, The Supreme Court’s draft opinion on overturning Roe v. Wade
Are those who do not respond not persons? — NOS4A2
Are persons and subjects living human beings or are they not? — NOS4A2
Point proven. I’ll put you down as the first person I’ve ever met who believes they were never a fetus. Unfortunately the reasoning fully contradicts the evidence. — NOS4A2
It is very complicated because you have no thing nor structure nor any formation to point to that can proven to be connected to your body, and that can be labelled with such a pronoun, other than the things, structures, and formations already in there. — NOS4A2
Trying to dissect rights in terms of when a being currently has personhood vs. merely being alive doesn't really work; whereas analyzing the living thing in terms of its substance works great. — Bob Ross
If they don't respond, you need some kind of other evidence that they're thinking.
What evidence? You never gave me any.
I don't really understand what you're talking about here. "Such a pronoun"? Which one? Is the question whether my mind is connected to my body?
It all seems very arbitrary. It’s not unlike the soul concept. — NOS4A2
You could ask your mother. You could watch any human birth. Look at sonograms and infer from there. But the fact is all homo sapiens were fetuses. You are a homo sapien. Therefor you were a fetus. — NOS4A2
So if I'm shot in the head, nothing relevant changes right? It's still me. No different than a broken arm. The DNA of my cells would be the same, most of the biology would still be perfectly fine.
A relevant change would be a hole in your head and damage to very important parts of your body. It's much different than a broken arm in that it's a different location on the body and involves different anatomy. No, your biology would not be perfectly fine. — NOS4A2
I can't see it from your position because there is no evidence for it. It cannot be shown that personhood or soul or "I" enter or leave the body at any point, and this includes during prenatal development. — NOS4A2
As I have argued, making such distinctions is utilized as a process of dehumanization. It couldn't be otherwise. Clearly you require it so as to avoid an uncomfortable truth. The idea that someone becomes a non-person upon injury to the brain, or that a fetus is merely parasite or cyst, are efforts to eschew the conscience so as to make their killing palatable. I don't think turning off life-support is to intentionally kill a person because the doctors were in fact keeping him alive, but to eviscerate a fetus is. These acts are not to be taken lightly. But wherever they are, even celebrated, is barbarism. — NOS4A2
Is this supposed to mean that there's no evidence for personhood? Or are you just hung up on the word "soul"? I've already said I'm not using it to refer to anything esoteric or mystical. You can just use another word like "mind" or "self".
This is an ad-hominem argument. You're only questioning my moral integrity, but you're not actually making any arguments, moral or otherwise.
From my perspective, you're the one avoiding an uncomfortable truth, that being that we draw lines between what is and is not a person, and these lines are not handed down to us by divine decree.
I understand, and have no problem with either term in common usage, but if I were to ask you to point to whatever it is you're referring to you would invariably point to your body, which has existed and grown since conception. That's what I'm hung up on. — NOS4A2
True, it is very uncomfortable for me to watch people make these distinctions. This is because they are not based on much, are often arbitrary, differ across individuals and cultures, yet can justify the worst in human behavior. So, for me, it is no longer about what these distinctions are (for there appear to be none), but why they are being made. My theory as to the "why" in regards to abortion is dehumanization. — NOS4A2
It is very complicated because you have no thing nor structure nor any formation to point to that can proven to be connected to your body, and that can be labelled with such a pronoun, other than the things, structures, and formations already in there. — NOS4A2
Come on, Bob. Yes, a foetus is not a cyst. A blastocyst is a cyst. The embryo develops in part of the blastocyst. It is considered a foetus from 8 to 10 weeks on. Here's some stuff to help you brush up on your anatomical terminology.A fetus is not a cyst: that is scientifically and blatantly false. — Bob Ross
A blastocyst is a cyst. — Banno
It is unambiguously not a person, not a human being with memories, needs, and preferences. — Banno
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.