You have not, no. To be honest, you’re making the same philosophical mistake that you have been making since you and I started discussing with one another directly; you’re confusing the traits of a thing with the thing itself. You have not described an essential difference (a difference having to do with the essence of a thing), but rather a qualitative one (a difference having to do with a thing’s traits or qualities).
So far as we are concerned, a thing is a collection of its properties: mass, form, light, function, etc. When you start talking about the underlying essence of things, you are begging the question-- if there IS something essentially human beyond the properties we can observe, then the Christian view is already correct, and abortion may be highly immoral.
However, if someone doesn’t already believe in that essential quality, but insists that a thing is a collection of its properties, then how are you to demonstrate your view? Surely, not by pointing to any combination of those properties.
And this is what I said before-- demanding legislative actions beyond observable properties, when the immaterial properties are sourced in a religious tradition, violates the separation of Church and State.
A color is not a physical entity, but rather a trait of light expressed by the entity of the photon.The photon’s color corresponds to its frequency or wavelength (it doesn’t matter which, they vary with the other’s inverse). Moreover, at a given instant, a rainbow has a finite number of photons that are passing through the retina of the observer, each with their own wavelength; thus, there are a finite (albeit large) number of colors in a rainbow at any given instant. Consequently . . .
I think you’ve stretched the metaphor too far. I’m not talking about the physical properties of photons (which do not, by the way, actually HAVE a color). I’m just saying that two states can be discrete despite not having a clear-cut dividing line.
To put this another way, it’s as though you are arguing that if you slap a new coat of paint on an old car that you’ve made the junker brand new, or at least a different car.
I wouldn’t categorize the development of a nervous system, and the subsequent capacity for subjective experience and the expression of the agency of free will, a “new coat of paint.”
I wouldn’t care much if my brain was transplanted into a robot, so long as I could still feel and experience. I would grieve the loss of a child’s body fairly little if he or she could have a complete functioning consciousness transplanted into a cloned body.
To me, the body is a vehicle for the experiencer. When the Bible says God created Man in His image, I don’t take that to mean God has 10 fingers, a brain and an appendix. I take it to mean that God has endowed us with consciousness, with a conscience, and with the agency of free will. It is not the molding of the clay for which I thank God, but the breath of awareness.