- Mar 21, 2005
- 19,419
- 673
- Faith
- Atheist
- Marital Status
- In Relationship
- Politics
- UK-Liberal-Democrats
Age-old question, let's get everyone's views. When does a human (or, indeed, any animal) begin its life?
Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
True, but the question is when do you think life begins. When asked that question, do you think of biological activity, or personhood and the inheritance of rights?If the ability to reproduce is needed for life, then for some of us life never begins. It all stems from the initial definition. Some say it is just the period between birth and death. I think that we have to acknowledge that we are not going to "discover" the answer scientifically in any absolute sense, but that the answer is at least partially dependent on our prior cultural constructs and philosophy of biology.
Age-old question, let's get everyone's views. When does a human (or, indeed, any animal) begin its life?
I am not sure if I like the concept of being "alive" in the first place.
We are just replicaing chemical robots
why the need for a new ontological category?
We have "living" and "dead". Why not "working replicator" and "irreparably broken replicator"? It seems to me that the concept of life lends support to some form of vitalism (although that may be a personal response) as if there are mystical additional properties to organisms alongside merely complicated chemical processes, something fundamental and metaphysically profound when if fact it is just a mechanical permutation of an underlying neutral reality.Life is a process. Our existence is found in motion -- in self-sustaining actions -- not in a static conception of "chemicals". When this motion stops, we are dead. Since life may either exist or fail to exist, we need a new ontological category.
This. (kinda)Well it could be said that any individual cell is alive. I'll assume life means personhood for humans. I said during gestation as that appears to be when the child gains some sort of consciousness.
Looks like 'during gestation' is winning. I'd be interested in hearing the ideas of those who said 'before conception'.
We have "living" and "dead". Why not "working replicator" and "irreparably broken replicator"?
It seems to me that the concept of life lends support to some form of vitalism
By that logic, my computer is extremely old indeed - some of its parts have been sitting in rock for millennia before they were turned into machinery.Well Technically given that both the sperm & egg were already alive before conception, that life started before conception![]()
By that logic, my computer is extremely old indeed - some of its parts have been sitting in rock for millennia before they were turned into machinery.
Maybe i have grown up with a vitalist conception, and am projecting.Nah. Life doesn't have to have to be the product of some "life energy". It can be a chemical activity.
eudaimonia,
Mark