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It's quite obvious when a person uses an example which is "pointed" at someone else. Credit me with some intelligence, please.Why must it be about you? I never suggested you painfully contrived anything, I very clearly said the writer of the violinist argument painfully contrived that.
How did it seem as if that was anyone but the author of that argument?
While driving to the dentist and listening to BBC Radio, abortion was being discussed. On the show the announcer stated that at latest count, there have been forty-five million abortions annually world-wide.
This is unbelievable and so sad. Many decry the loss of life from other means: wars, murders, etc., and all are tragic. But this number, forty-five million abortions annually is truly unbelievable.
It's only getting started. Barely getting started. There will come a day when it will be legal to torture and kill a 2 year old child. It will likely happen within the next decade. Then it will continue to escalate until all imaginable evil will be regarded as legal and good. All goodness and innocence and beauty will be illegal and punishable by death.
It will happen within my lifetime. Not a matter of if but when.
The real question is whether or not God will show us mercy and end the world so that it doesn't last long.
dreamer1982 said:I'm still waiting to hear the fantastical refutation.
It's only getting started. Barely getting started. There will come a day when it will be legal to torture and kill a 2 year old child. It will likely happen within the next decade. Then it will continue to escalate until all imaginable evil will be regarded as legal and good. All goodness and innocence and beauty will be illegal and punishable by death.
It will happen within my lifetime. Not a matter of if but when.
The real question is whether or not God will show us mercy and end the world so that it doesn't last long.
Why should he be kidding? If its ok to kill the unborn at 12 or 24 weeks why not at 2 years?Lol, I realize you're kidding, but the sad thing is that there really are people who believe that seriously.
Why should he be kidding? If its ok to kill the unborn at 12 or 24 weeks why not at 2 years?
But not everyone finds any credibility in your opinion.I generally try and make the generous assumption that most people are intelligent enough to not commit the slippery slope fallacy.
I generally try and make the generous assumption that most people are intelligent enough to not commit the slippery slope fallacy.
But not everyone finds any credibility in your opinion.
Thinking it is ok to kill the unborn at 12 or 24 weeks has already shown there is not enough inteligence and the slipery slope has already started.
Why 12 weeks, why 24? Already the view has ignored the objective reality that all life starts at conception, whether 12 weeks old or 24 weeks old. Whether one thinks its ok to terminate it at 12 weeks or 24 weeks is just subjective. Why not 2 years? Sure the subjective criteria might not meet your thinking but so what, its subjective.
Just a bit of irony: accusing others of lacking “intelligence” and in the same breath misspelling the word is… interesting.Thinking it is ok to kill the unborn at 12 or 24 weeks has already shown there is not enough inteligence[sic] and the slipery[sic] slope has already started. Why 12 weeks, why 24?
Jedi said:Just a bit of irony: accusing others of lacking "intelligence" and in the same breath misspelling the word is... interesting.
The reason is that, contrary to the hardcore pro-life camp's suggestion, humans don't spring into existence fully formed all at once. There are steps to human making; our basic structures required for self-sustaining survival and the qualities that make us "human" are assembled piece by piece over the better part of a year. If defining characteristics of a human are not present at the earliest stages, however, there can be no sensible accusation of murder. You cannot destroy something that doesn't exist.
The biggest problem pro-life advocates seem to have is anachronistic argumentation; that is, supposing that because a thing will likely develop into something other than what it currently is, it must therefore be treated like that future thing and merits its moral status. Nothing could be further from the truth. The atoms that compose an apple may be destined to be consumed by a man, its matter used to produce sperm and those sperm used to combine with an egg to grow up into a fully developed human adult, but we don't attribute to apples the status of "human" just because it harbors the potential to be built into one. We must treat things as they are, not as what they may become. Destroying an apple is not synonymous with murder of a human.
So the big question is "what are the defining characteristics of a person?" What is it that the pro-life camp is trying so avidly to protect? Are they trying to protect this entity because it's "human" (in the sense that it contains human DNA)? If that's the case, they should be abhorred at the thought of scratching an itch or clapping their hands, committing genocide against countless little human skin cells that are likewise packed with human DNA. Very well then, the presence of human DNA does not merit protection of an entity. Is it "life?" Pro-lifers often shout "Life begins at conception," but no one is disagreeing with that fact. If the zygote/fetus wasn't composed of biologically living tissue, there would be no reason to kill it. Yet something being biologically alive does not necessitate protection from termination. If this were true, again, you would be guilty of genocide whenever you scratched and itch or clapped your hands, destroying countless thousands of little living skin cells. So saying "life begins at conception," implying that "life" inherently warrants protection from termination, really isn't a very good argument, as we kill many things with "life" constantly with no moral reservations.
We're left with quite a question, then. If "life" is not a characteristic that warrants a subject unconditional protection, nor is possessing human DNA, what are we squabbling over? I submit the heart of the issue is "personhood." By "person" I mean to refer the essence of human individuals: the self, defined by such characteristics as sentience, self-awareness, intelligence, consciousness, and the general traits that compose an individual's "personality."
Pro-lifers get up in arms over abortion because they view it not as yet another clump of human cells or another example of biological life, but because they believe it to be a person. However, there's just no reason to define a zygote as such when the entity in question demonstrates no evidence of what constitutes a "person;" the capacity for higher thought. These things cannot exist before the apparatus is present. No cerebral cortex, developed spinal column, different brain hemispheres, etc. all point to the absence of any kind of "person." Heck, the hind brain doesn't even start developing until week 8, and that's the unconscious part of the brain that monitors automatic functions like heartbeat & breathing.
At the earliest stages of pregnancy, the entity in question simply does not harbor any traits of a "person" in any degree. If it's not a person, then, we have only terminated a potential person - which is actually no person at all - and our "crime" is of the same kind as smashing an apple that would have been consumed and its nutrients used to construct a person at some later point. You cannot destroy what was never there to begin with. This is not to say that the defining characteristics of personhood aren't present later in the pregnancy (we have good reason to believe they are, especially at 20+ weeks, due to brain development), only that the arbitrary point of conception is not a good place to start in claiming the existence of a person in the womb and that abortions at earlier stages are morally permissible.
Your reasoning is so faulty that I don't know where to begin to answer the errors in you statements.
First, you haven't got a clue what the pro life position is. We don't believe that just any life begins at conception, we believe that "a life" begins at conception. That is to say a human being/life begins at conception, one that will develop into a baby, an infant, a child, an adult and an elderly human being.
The unborn are at a particular stage of development and not being "assembled pice by piece" or "a potential human being". They are 100% human being. Skin cells are not developing into different stages of a human being. They are a part of a human being. You are confusing parts with wholes.
Person and personhood are psychological terms not scientific terms.
I've asked many pro choice advocates when does the unborn become a person? And I have received just as many different answers, from when the unborn has a brain to when it is born. The reason I get a different answer from everyone I ask is because no one knows for sure when the unborn becomes a person.
And since no one knows when the unborn becomes a person, then it is possible that some abortions are killing innocent human beings.
I believe the all human beings are persons.
The only reason people are bringing up personhood is because they have already lost the argument that the unborn is not a human being and now they have to find another way to justify abortions.
So as the life starts at conception and this both the life at 12 weeks and 24 weeks is still the life, abortion is killing the life. I think it is reasonable to call out a lack of intelligence if there is observable proof for it.Just a bit of irony: accusing others of lacking "intelligence" and in the same breath misspelling the word is… interesting.
This thingy thing you are referring to isn’t by any chance a human being in foetus stage developing as the human being?supposing that because a thing will likely develop into something other than what it currently is,
Ok so if one were to say the child can be killed if the parents wish because it isnt a fully grown human, you are ok with that? Or are you only ok with any subjective opinion you have? Say 12 weeks and 24 weeks, sentience or whatever, isn’t suitable for others? Its not for pro-choice of course, pro-choice doesn’t want any life terminated, but I am talking about the crazy argument you are putting forward.Except that it must therefore be treated like that future thing and merits its moral status.
An apple no, but a foestus is a human being and not an apple.Destroying an apple is not synonymous with murder of a human.
That was my question. The pro-life see one can observe the human being from conception to adulthood, subjective criteria in order to murder the human at various stages is about as sick as humanity can get.So the big question is "what are the defining characteristics of a person?"
So having not know the pro-life argument, you now know from my explanations above your understanding was incorrect.What is it that the pro-life camp is trying so avidly to protect? Are they trying to protect this entity because it’s "human" (in the sense that it contains human DNA)?
This is observable nonsense, one can observe a skin cell isn’t a human being developing. One can observe for alonmg time and see that. One can however observe a human foetus developing.If that’s the case, they should be abhorred at the thought of scratching an itch or clapping their hands, committing genocide against countless little human skin cells
Ok convince me a child is a 'human being' some entity you call child which doesnt even have the ability to reproduce and thus continue the species is hardly a human being. Convince me otherwise. LOLLost? Not quite. You have yet to convince anyone that a zygote is a "human being;" some entity exhibiting unspecified traits concerning which you only beg the question of its status as a moral entity worthy of unconditional protection.
Okay then, let's see where.
Which is exactly what I said the pro-life position was...
You're just throwing around a bunch of vague pro-life phrases out there. By "human being" do you mean "person," possessing the traits I described in my previous post? If not, then how do you define "human being" (i.e. what traits define it) and is there evidence of those traits existing at the earliest stages of pregnancy? Additionally, how are those traits unique to the "human being" that distinguish it from other examples of life (e.g. a cockroach) and human organic matter (e.g. the body of a recently deceased human or human skin cells)?
Because Psychology is in no way scientific...
This is a fallacious conclusion, as difference in opinion does not negate certainty or accuracy. Indeed, if this assertion of yours is true, then Jesus' status of diety is in question, as countless Christians disagree over countless things concerning Christian theology. Should all Christians' thoughts on theology be considered invalid because there is disagreement, just as you have done with those who are pro-choice?
And, on the other side of the coin, if this is true, it is possible pro-life people are condemning others of murder before the clump of cells is even a person, making atrocious accusations toward innocent people.
This sentence is meaningless as "human beings" and "persons" are so far synonymous in this discussion. If they are not, what's the difference? If they are the same, then this sentence is nothing more than the logic fallacy of circular reasoning.
Lost? Not quite. You have yet to convince anyone that a zygote is a "human being;" some entity exhibiting unspecified traits concerning which you only beg the question of its status as a moral entity worthy of unconditional protection.
Be careful not to think yourself high and mighty while those who disagree with you are morally bankrupt. The difference here isn't one of value, but of fact. Everyone agress that persons ought to be protected if at all possible. The divide here is different conclusions about whether or not what we're dealing with is, in fact, a person. Like I mentioned previously, a zygote at the earliest stages exhibites none of the defining traits of a person (or "human being"); such traits as sentience, consciousness, being self-aware, intelligence, and other qualities that compose some sort of "personality." If these things aren't present, then there exists no person. If there is no person, terminating the organic apparatus cannot be considered murder.
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