Rosalinda, yes. Very well said.
Voco - can’t you see that the more you proclaim your view, the more you are negating its meaning. New human life is that. If a day comes when twinning (or more occurs) is revealed, we can then recognize separate (individual) lives. To argue beyond that for your view regarding atomic (and subatomic) changes is an exercise in futility. All new human life begins at conception. You’ve agreed with that statement. Can you leave it there?
To say more must be qualified with “science believes now that … .”
Dear Catharina,
I believe that in the main essentials we are in agreement.
All new life begins with conception.
But that includes the fissioned siblings, Thus they all too began their lives at conception, but not as individuals, but as a divisible embryo, which I will accept is a human being,(under construction), but still a human being.
Thus, though the life of the siblings began at conception, their individuality started at fission.
Thus prior to fission, they were not individuals, so prior to fission, there was no individual.
The problem we seem to have is one of language, where sloppy definitions are being misused.
Though the dictionary defines ‘person’ as ‘human being’, it is clear that this is in a legal context, so is referring to a post natal human being, not an embryo.
I allow that physically there is little difference between a pre and post natal human being, but the difference legally is enormous.
Age is counted from birth, not conception, even for identical siblings, which by definition share the same conception, so are identically aged.
Thus I actually consider it to be a linguistic error to refer to a pre-natal human being as a person, Individual, definitely, if beyond the eighth week, and person, only in as much as ‘person’ is a simile of ‘individual’.
So this all comes down to useage, and missuseage of words.
I accept, and even assert that ALL new life begins with conception, but individuality begins at fission, or after the point that fission becomes impossible.