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Oreoracle
Guest
You seem to think that any mention of genetics assumes materialism. By “human” I am referring to homo sapiens, a species. Like any species, we are distinguished by our genetics; humans are humans because they are genetically similar enough to reproduce with each other but differ enough from other species so that reproduction is impossible.Now you’re begging the question. You can’t assume materialism as a premise without proving that materialism is true.
Thus, “human”, by definition, is a species of animal whose DNA is such that their reproductive opportunities are limited to their own species. That is the only requirement for being a human. This is why Christians can say things like “embryos are human life”. They certainly are, due to their DNA. A sperm cell doesn’t have enough information to serve as the coding for a human, so sperm cells are not human life. It really isn’t such a radical notion.
I have no idea what you’re talking about. You told me that the fact of sin in humanity is necessary. I don’t know how else to interpret that other than “human sin had to happen eventually”.Not at all. Only that it is impossible to be “sin-free” according to any subjective view and/or according to their own power, ability, or merits.
It may be blunt, but it accurately reflects what you’re getting at.Strawman.