M
mlchance
Guest
Agreed, but I sometimes wonder about teenagers.One is no less a human because they happen to be in the toddler stage, or the teen-age stage, or the senior stage of living.
– Mark L. Chance.
Agreed, but I sometimes wonder about teenagers.One is no less a human because they happen to be in the toddler stage, or the teen-age stage, or the senior stage of living.
As is fertilization just a stage.They are not to be confused as entirely separate entities - it is just a stage in the process of growth in a human being.
The fact is that this is just one part of a life-long series of changes in human beings’ development. One is no less a human because they happen to be in the toddler stage, or the teen-age stage, or the senior stage of living.
Incorrect. Rather, as has been explained, “because of the uncertainty existing up to specialization into foetus and placenta,” it is prudent to assert that at least a single person exists from fertilization. Otherwise, one runs the risk of ignorantly destroying a human being via abortion.Because of the uncertainty existing up to specialization into foetus and placenta, it is unsafe to assert that a single person exists from fertilization.
What I should have said was the embryo has the potential to become a number of human beings, typically the range 0 to 2, but I believe that 2 can be exceeded. Thus, because 1<>0, and 1<>2, then an embryo cannot be a = 1 human being by definition.The embryo is a human being. The sperm and egg, at the point of fertilization, combine to create a single-cell embryonic zygote, at which point the sperm and egg no longer exist. The zygote now has 46 chromosomes (plus/minus with Down’s and other syndromes), the exact number needed to create a member of the human species. This new single-celled being then immediately produces specifically human proteins and enzymes that drives his or her development throughout its whole life.
lifeissues.net/writers/irv/irv_01lifebegin1.html
This is all a philosophical argument. In the final analysis, science cannot help.The potential argument is philosophical, not scientific.
Yes, there are areas on the planet that can support more than they do, but if an average is taken of population density, and rate of consumption, then we need about seven planets to hold the present population without it suffering starvation.The planet is not bursting at the seams with a population crisis, but that is a point for another thread I guess. Just wanted to point out an ideological fallacy that drives the abortion agenda.
These formulas express the “natural rights” theory, based on a theory of natural law or natural order, religious or secular. Unfortunately, although many people still believe in a God-given natural law with self-evident moral truths, natural rights provides little practical guidance since everyone sees different self-evident truths emerging from the same facts. Most philosophers today attempt to avoid this line of argument, which is known as the “naturalistic fallacy.” The first men to articulate these principles 200 years ago thought it was self-evident that only white men were genetically suited for full democratic citizenship. Today most rights advocates think that women and all races should be included in the circle of rights, but that the circle self-evidently stops at the human race, a position I call “human-racism.”
Since the only minds that were ever considered by democratic theorists were those of human beings, this tradition became subsumed within human-racism, which could appeal to religious beliefs about the soul and the divine intention for human beings. But now the animal rights movement has challenged the rights tradition by demonstrating that some nonhuman minds suffer, are self-aware and have other mental traits that make them worthy of rights-bearing. Likewise the personhood ethics tradition of bioethics has argued that some human beings, such as fetuses or the brain-dead, are human but not persons, and therefore are no longer bearers of rights. In liberal democracy’s personhood tradition rights are for persons, not humans, and not all humans are persons nor are all persons necessarily human. As the UDHR says, “Everyone is entitled to all the rights and freedoms set forth in this Declaration, without distinction of any kind, such as race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status…” —to which we need now add, species.
This could have been posted at the entrance to Auschwitz, as a justification for what was happening there.“In liberal democracy’s personhood tradition rights are for persons, not humans, and not all humans are persons nor are all persons necessarily human.”
Agree. Will and has, a fact throughout history.This could have been posted at the entrance to Auschwitz, as a justification for what was happening there.
If not all humans are persons, some person can be killed. The government will decide who qualifies.
My DH works at Genentech. PM me if you need info on how this process works. Human DNA strands are used to make proteins that are replicated, expressing the protein needed for the product, put into a buffer solution, and injected into the human being. It’s just DNA. One DNA strand doesn’t make a human being. A part doesn’t equal a whole.Regarding human DNA, I wonder what rights do bacteria with plasmids that carry the code for human insulin and growth hormone that produce those biological products at Genentech. I do not think embryos or fetuses before eight weeks old have any rights (because brain stem activity emerges from the eighth week of conception).
Science can’t tell us when the soul is imparted to the body, this is true. Science can’t tell us when this twinning exactly occurs. But this has no bearing on whether the human being exists. The science is clear. The rest is philosophical.What I should have said was the embryo has the potential to become a number of human beings, typically the range 0 to 2, but I believe that 2 can be exceeded. Thus, because 1<>0, and 1<>2, then an embryo cannot be a = 1 human being by definition.
It may become one, or it may become two or more, or it may fail to produce any.
To posit that a human being can fission raises a severe philosophical problem, for if a human being can fission, then the soul must also fission. I do not belive that Mother Church accepts that souls can fission.
This means that the soul can be given only after the number of individuals is defined, that is, the number of persons.
This is all a philosophical argument. In the final analysis, science cannot help.
Science though. can show up paradoxes in philosophies, but beyond that it is of little help.
Yes, there are areas on the planet that can support more than they do, but if an average is taken of population density, and rate of consumption, then we need about seven planets to hold the present population without it suffering starvation.
Hi Jennifer,Science can’t tell us when the soul is imparted to the body, this is true. Science can’t tell us when this twinning exactly occurs. But this has no bearing on whether the human being exists. The science is clear. The rest is philosophical.
Ah yes, accepting this is just the logical blockbuster that leads to an insoluable paradox. that was the point I was skating around.Voco Pro Tatiano mused in post #64:
[sign]To posit that a human being can fission raises a severe philosophical problem, for if a human being can fission, then the soul must also fission. I do not belive that Mother Church accepts that souls can fission.[/sign]
Theologian, Fr. Anthony Zimmerman, wrote the following in his article, Human Personhood Begins at Fertilization:
Actually, for the period of existance of the gametes, they are complete functioning organisms, though they run only on stored energy, having no means of self-nourishment, but then, seeds and eggs run on stored energy in their initial stages.[sign]The soul is whole and entire in every part of the human body, but the soul itself is not composed of the parts which it animates. The soul integrates the body into one system, is co-extensive with the body which it animates, but is not divisible as are the materials of the body. When part of the body is amputated, the soul is no longer in the separated limb. When tissue is taken to the laboratory for inspection and cultivation, the soul is not in that living tissue.
[/sign]
This would also apply to the misleading statement in post #49 which asserted ‘gametes have souls’. They do not possess a soul anymore than do strands of DNA or an amputated limb.
Abortion isn’t wrong because the embryo has a soul. It is wrong because it intentionally takes the life of another human being.She has no illusion of being more than a single person, and I would consider her not to have more than one soul.
Thus we seem to have the situation:-
One brain, one person, one soul: two brains, two persons, two souls.
So in the case of incomplete fission, personhood, and ensoulment seems to be dependant upon there being a brain present, at leat, an embryonic brain.
This brings us back to the development of CNS.
I never mentioned abortion.Abortion isn’t wrong because the embryo has a soul. It is wrong because it intentionally takes the life of another human being.
Regardless of whether or not one believes a human being has a soul at conception, the undeniable biologic truth is that it is a human being at conception. These things you are bringing into the conversation are interesting, albeit rare and exotic, but it doesn’t change the fact that abortion takes the life of a human being.
This is a very sad article by a cafeteria scientist.In regards to twinning and your 14-day window, please see this article:
lifeissues.net/writers/irv/irv_48amicicuriaebriefs2.html
“Far too much emphasis has been placed on the occurrence of twinning. If twinning occurs (either from mechanical or natural means), it only signifies that one individual has given way to two individuals. The individuality of the latter in no way diminishes the reality of the individuality of the former.”
lifeissues.net/writers/zim/zim_187personhood.htmlWithin 6 to 24 hours after fertilization the zygote sends a hormone to the ovary of the mother called the “ovum factor” in order to protect its newly created life…In response to the stimulus of the ovum factor from the zygote, the mother’s ovary secretes a product into the blood stream called the “Early Pregnancy Factor.” …The ovaries then secrete the early pregnancy factor into the blood circulation, and the lymph glands pick it up with their receptors. They respond by releasing immuno-suppressor factors which protect the zygote from being attacked and destroyed by the mother’s immune system because he or she is a foreign body… EPF is also a growth factor, facilitating cell division. The newly conceived child continues to secrete its signal until the blastocyst stage…
Dianne IrvingThe correct scientific facts about which there is a scientific consensus are the following. Human *life *is biologically a continuum which has not halted or been interrupted for thousands of years. Although this continuum may be seen by some to be just a “process”, it must be pointed out that there must be *something *there which is undergoing the “process”. For example, “childhood” is a “process”, yet no one would seriously argue that there is *no child *present which is undergoing that process. Similarly, fertilization (or cloning) is a process; but there is *something *which is undergoing that process. A human sperm or ovum, a kidney cell, or a liver, may be said to have human “life”, but the real issue is that they are not human beings, capable *themselves *of directing and sustaining the continuum of human life. One could implant any of these in a uterus and they would simply rot. Only human beings can direct and sustain the continuum of human life and transmit it
Dear Rosalinda,Voco Pro Tatiano has discounted Dianne N. Irving, Ph.D. as a “cafeteria scientist”. She is an articulate scientist and philosopher, and a former research biochemist at the National Institute of Health, Bethesda, Maryland. Name-calling is not what we do in this forum. We are here to exchange ideas and to critically examine the merit of these ideas.
Dianne Irving
lifeissues.net/writers/irv/irv_09cloninghuman1.html
Compare the truth and precision of her writing with these:
“In terms of process, there is no real difference between an unfused sperm and an ovum pair, and a zygote or between a zygote and a blastocyst.” post #28 by Voco
or
“The sperm and the ovum… are part of the life process which is potentially immortal.” post #30 by Voco
or
“Life is not a thing, it is a process…all events in the process are equally important.” post #30 by Voco
or
“The embryo has the potential to become a human being…Likewise, the human being has the potential to become a person, but that is only a potential.” post #55 by Voco
Thank you for your insight here and for bringing it back to what is the most important point to adhere to IMHO - an embryo is a human being. Life begins at conception.But that is a matter of philosophy and theology, not biology, which clearly delineates that a new individual of the human species has its beginning at conception. (It is quite possible that there are biological factors at the zygote stage which determine whether there is one or more individual present.)