mistermack wrote:Seth wrote:
It's indisputable because it has been proven beyond any doubt by scientific investigation that the organism that is created by the alignment of the maternal and paternal chromosomes of two human beings within a fertilized human egg is entirely comprised of human DNA and it is in fact a new, living, presently single-celled organism beginning development into a fully-developed human being.
You obviously don't know the meaning of the word indisputable. Would you like to give us YOUR definition?
As far as I'm concerned, a fetus is a POTENTIAL human being.
A fertilised human egg is not a human being to most people. Even you called it a single celled organism. You need to make your mind up. Is it a human being, or a single celled organism?
When a baby dies shortly after it's born, people say it only lived X hours.
They don't say it lived 9 months and X hours.
You are correct mistermack, within your definition of human being, and Seth is correct within his. You're defining the terms differently.
Where, i think, Seth differs is that in his mind "human" and "human being" are the same thing. He shows, and is correct, that an embryo or blastocyst of two humans is human, but then he assumes from that that it must be afforded all the same rights as born humans.
To me, it's not a bright line -- but, a very grey line, from a fertilized egg to a human being. I look at it this way. A human sperm is human, but it isn't a human being. A human egg is human, but it isn't a human being. A fertilized egg is human, but it isn't a human being.
Any place along the spectrum from there to birth is arbitrary. Some people even argue that birth is arbitrary, and I tend to agree. Some have advocated for post birth abortion for a period of time, because a newborn is not a human being.
There is no scientific "proof" that anything is a human being.
I am prochoice as a matter of pragmatism. But, I'm not absolutist. I really don't think that abortion has to be all or nothing -- legal and unrestricted until birth -- there is room for a compromise. I mean, once a child is past 28 weeks, it can be born alive and live. How different is that from a 28 weeker that just happens to wait longer. If the woman goes into labor and births it, can you just kill it? Why not?
I see it as necessary that women be able to abort for sure through 12 week so, maybe to 20. As we get past there, though, I really can't see an argument for abortion unless there is an issue of the life or substantial health risk to the mother. I.e., I come from the school that there has to be limit. I'm flexible as to where that limit is, as to what is reasonable. But, I can't fathom how anyone could think it would be reasonable to kill a 28 or 30 week fetus. That's just a premature baby. There may be reasons that NECESSITATE it occurring, but whim should not be one of those reasons, IMO.
I like to think that I'm trying to be reasonable about abortion. Some feminists tend to get bent out of shape out of the mere mention of any sort of limit. This is, I think, an American phenomenon, though. I sometimes wonder why there is so little public outrage about the 20-odd week limits found in almost all western industrialized nations, yet in the US, limits on late term abortions are viewed as misogynistic over-reaching of the State.
“When I was in college, I took a terrorism class. ... The thing that was interesting in the class was every time the professor said ‘Al Qaeda’ his shoulders went up, But you know, it is that you don’t say ‘America’ with an intensity, you don’t say ‘England’ with the intensity. You don’t say ‘the army’ with the intensity,” she continued. “... But you say these names [Al Qaeda] because you want that word to carry weight. You want it to be something.” - Ilhan Omar