The Church has a problem with harvesting organs from people who are still alive. "Brain death’ is not the Church’s criteria for death. Both heart and brain must cease functioning. There can still be brain activity under brain death. BD criteria were developed in order to facilitate organ harvesting. Pope Benedict recently reemphasized that no organs are to be harvested from those still alive.
So how would the heart be kept alive for doing heart transplants? If I’m not mistaken, Biggie quoted a Church document saying that when a brain stops functioning the individual is dead.
Being aware as a basis for personhood would mean that all of us would not be persons when we are asleep. So then if someone kills you in during sleep it isn’t murder, since according to your criteria, you aren’t a person with rights? This is obviously not a workable definition of personhood.
I anticipated this, which is why I always said
capable of being aware. If I’m asleep, I’m not aware, but I’m certainly capable of being aware. If I’m in a coma, my brain may be capable of awareness there too, but in this case it’s hard to say, so doctors would give me the benefit of the doubt. You might say that a zygote can eventually be capable of awareness too, but this is also true of a sperm and egg. In addition, a coma patient already has the capability to be aware, but in a zygote, that capacity has not appeared yet.
The Church has it right on: from the moment fertilization is complete, a new human being with body and soul exists.
See Dr. Paul Bynes, M.D. for more extensive information.
None of us were ever an egg or a sperm. But each of us was a zygote, blastocyst, embryo and fetus at one time. Review Biology 101. The above are all descriptions of stages of human development, just like infant, toddler, child, adolescent, adult.
We were all an egg
and a sperm at some point. Yes, a zygote is alive. Yes, it is human. But to say it has all the rights of a grown person is like saying that if I type one letter on my keyboard, I’ve written a book.
Our laws prior to 1973 were generally based on Christian principles we could agree on, especially those principles of life, death and protection of the innocent. The law of God is not made by humans, but by God only.
Not really. The constitution was written by both Deists, who didn’t believe the words of the Bible were necessarily true, and Christians, who did. Laws were often based on customs and culture as opposed to biblical commands. But for the most part, the laws Christians could agree on and the laws everyone else could agree on were practically the same, and where they weren’t, people just weren’t aware of it. It wasn’t until Roe v. Wade that the schism really opened up.
And why not??? Free exercise of religion means that we need not check our beliefs at the door when we run for office or vote.
You are absolutely right. However, you will never be able to convince someone your arguments are correct unless you base them on principles that he agrees with. I know you will say that the protection of innocent human life is a principle that everyone can agree with, but that kind of uses definitions, rather than a deeper understanding of the biological process, to argue your point.
It’s kind of like the “ontological proof for the existence of God”. The argument was that God, by definition, is the most perfect being in every way. If something is false or made-up, that is an imperfection. Since God is perfect in every way, he can’t be false or made-up, therefore God exists. While I’m certainly not claiming God doesn’t exist, this isn’t an argument that would convince anyone because it uses part of the definition of God to argue that he exists. Likewise, that argument uses the definition of human and the definition of life to argue that a zygote is a human life, and by extension a person, which is why it isn’t very convincing for many.
No, a brain dead person is not medically dead. Otherwise the church would have no problems with just burying them right there and then with functioning organ systems. That is precisely why the catagory of “brain dead” exists, otherwise one is just plain dead.
In addition, why would there ever be an issue of removing life support for a person who was medically dead? Answer, Brain dead does not equal medically dead. A death certificate cannot be issued for a brain dead individual.
By “medically” I meant that doctors pronounce a person dead in the event of brain death. And I think Biggie posted a link regarding brain death that seems to support what I’ve said.
Nope. As has been pointe out who we are = our body (including brain) + our soul
I guess my point was that, we can imagine that if medical technology were advanced enough, it could replace many parts of our body. Indeed it has, on occasion. But it could never replace our brains. It is our brains that encompass who we are.