How does that fact erase the inherent dignity of a human being? The “design” for a person may be unfulfilled at any point of “being” - am I less of a person because I failed to graduate medical school, for instance?
I never said anything about erasing the dignity of a human being, I just said that the potential was there, but was not at this point fulfilled.
We have completed and approved drawings, and the site is cleared and prepared. Services have been laid, and the ground has been cut for the footings.
There is as yet no house, but you can begin to see the form that will become.
Zygote = human embryo = human being,
No!, your equasion is fanciful. The zygote has the potential to become an embryo, with external supply support.
The embryo has the potential to become a human being.
But these are only potentials, they are not fulfilled.
Likewise, the human being has the potential to become a person, but that too is only a potential.
To equate potential with actuality is a gross travel of fancy.
I agree that to deny a G_d given potential is a grave sin. Certainly I consider deliberate abortion, other than for the grave necessity for saving the live of the mother, to be an act of murder, if it is performed after the quickening, which is traditionally seen as a sign from G_d that a new life is waiting to be born.
Before that time, I am open to doubt as to whether the potential has become actual. As I have said over, science cannot answer this question, other than by indicating whether the CNS is sufficiently developed as to be able to be a vehicle for a mind.
If there is no vehicle for the mind, then there cannot be a mind.
If there is no mind, there can be no expression of personality.
If thee can be no expression of personality, then the potential person has not become actual.
So I doubt your next conclusion.
so yes it is a person. I haven’t met a person who wasn’t a human being.
Oh I have, several, but then you probably doubt that dogs have souls, but they certainly have personalities, hence they have minds, and so, albeit in a limited way, they too are persons.
Science, at least medical science, also has a tradition of “First do no harm”. If science can’t agree as to what a human being is, why are we so eager to end its existence without all facts present? (And all facts available saying that abortion does more harm to baby and mother than not).
Who is so eager?
Certainly not me.
The use of abortion as a means of contraception is in my eyes a grave sin, and even if done very early, is little, if any, better than murder.
However, that brings is to contraception:
I can see NO effective difference in any means of contraception, whether mechanical, temporal, or chemical. I do not believe that the ‘rhythm’ method is any more moral than any other. To this extent, I am pro-choice, provided that this choice is made for the welfare of the family, and not just for convenience or license.
I agree that when the population of the planet needed to be expanded, the commandment: ‘Go forth and multiply!’ was vital, and action counter to that was a grave sin, but now, when the planet is bursting at the seams, a different view is needed.