I think you’re still confused.
I understand the distinction you’re referring to, but you are using it in a confused way, not me.
Apart from giving off a false sense of confidence, “assertions” will not help the discussion. I took the time to explain why i think i am right, therefore i think its only charitable that you should do the same.
If you had a drawing of a table and I destroyed that, I would have destroyed your table?
No, because a drawing of a table or a drawing of a baby is
not in production towards the actuality of a real table or a real baby!. It is not in the immediate nature of a drawing to become a table or a baby. It is not the immediate end to which it is in act. However, if i valued the drawing of a table, i would be upset. But the drawing of a table and a drawing of a baby is not actually a table or a baby.
Its not difficult, and thus i don’t see why you would have failed to understand the difference :banghead:.
If I cut down a tree you were growing that you were going to make a table from, I would have destroyed your table?
If i was making the tree specifically for the actuality of a table, then yes i would have been upset, because the table is the end for which i was growing the tree; and thus the tree has value in that fundamental respect. This much i have clearly showed you above, but then again you would have to create a “straw-men” in order to give the illusion of winning this debate.
You kill the baby when you punch it because it’s an *actual *(not just possible and not just potential) baby, not because it’s “the definite end product of conception.”
You are not looking at the issue
metaphysically. You are just labeling something as a baby without justifying it.
Its a baby in virtue of the end to which it is in act. A thing is according to the purpose for which it was created. A table is a table and has the value of a table because that is the “end” for which it was created; otherwise it is just a bit a wood molded into a particular shape and does not on that factor alone have the value of a table. I know that you have intelligence because your nature is in act towards that potential end. Even when you are asleep, or in a coma, or unconscious, “intellect” is still in your immediate nature in so far as your nature is in act for the existence of that end, and your living body is valued as an intelligent being according to the end to which that particular organism is act; in so far as that is the end to which your nature is in act. We only know a person is a person because we witness certain physical entities producing behavior that is personal and intelligent, and it is in virtue of that potential act that we label a particular physical entity as “personal” in nature and not just another entity.
To show how much the end is important in defining the value something, lets take a look brain damage. We respect the value of brain damaged victims, not because they have brain damage, but because we know that had they not been brain damaged they would express the nature of a fully functional person, and it is in virtue of that fact that we feel obligated to care for those with brain damage because they are still persons by nature. And thus actuality alone cannot be the standard to which we place value on something but rather we must include the potential end to which a particular nature is in act, when defining the value something. I know that a human embryo has the same value as a person because it is in actuality toward that end, which is a person. It has the value of a person in virtue of the end to which it is in act. It is in its nature to be a person, and to destroy an embryo would be to destroy that person.
It is as simple as that.