So do you! I address this also later in my essay. This is the danger of taking one quote out of the whole thing and dismissing the rest.
I see no advantage in equivocating over some linguistic difference between the words “alive” and “a life”. A dog, a tree and an amoeba are all “a life”.
The crux that my entire essay is based on is identifying some point in this conversation from life, to a life, to whatever on which there is an intellectually honest basis on which to form an opinion of assigning an entity rights or a “right to life”.
I simply see no basis available to me to make this argument between cells just before conception and cells just after it. So what if it is a unique combination of DNA? So are viruses and we assign them no such right to life.
In fact I see the argument “The cells that form a new life are useless by themselves. Left to their own they die.“ As being particularly weak as left to your own you will die too eventually. You are applying an entirely subjective measure to this.
Who is to say that the “life” (short as it is) of a sperm is not just as important as the “life” of a fertilised cell becoming an adult and dying. Both things are alive, both things live their life cycle as it is and both things then die. I therefore fail to see the difference of one being useful/useless on its own without wholly assuming that the life cycle of one is more special that than of another. What basis have we for saying that a sperm or a human have any more or less right to life than the other if this is the argument we were to make?
The only intellectually honest way to break this regress that I can find is to use as a basis for the assigning of rights, that faculty which itself is the source of them. That faculty which is not available to trees, dogs, amoeba or sperm. Coming from that basis none of the issues above are issues any more, morally or intellectually.
We aren’t discussing viruses here. We’re discussing abortion. That means we are discussing the intentional killing of unborn human beings - not viruses. If you can’t see the difference, then you aren’t being “intellectually honest.”
Yes, we all die. But we all die as human beings, not as viruses or spermatozoa or ova or trees or fish or sunflowers.
I’ve run across your “argument” before. It makes no sense to me. You’re looking at the world and its living creatures as a massive number of cells that sometimes are stuck together in some sort of conglomerate. This is an archaic and impractical way to look at the world and the life we are given. The way you make it sound, why don’t we just go out and kill anyone we want? What difference does it make? If what is killed in an abortion at any gestational age is not a human being but just cells, then what is born is not a human being but just cells and what develops into an adult is not a human being but just cells. That’s because every single one of those cells will die.
Please tell me what happens to a spermatozoan that is present in the ejaculate but that does not fertilize an ovum. Does it change other than to degrade? Does it have any sort of potential for developing into another organism? Does it carry genetic information that will ever be used by any person? No, it doesn’t. It’s a biological dead end and if you think it has any value as a life, I really wonder about the way you think.
But, if that spermatozoan fertilizes an ovum, something does happen because the genetic information merges with the genetic information of the ovum and a new being is formed. What can that new being do? Is she a dead end? No. She can develop based on the information provided by her unique DNA, she can learn, she can make contributions to society, she can teach biology to people who obviously don’t understand the subject, she may save lives, she may find a cure for AIDS. No spermatozoan by itself can ever do these things no matter how long you wait and watch. No ovum by itself can ever do these things, no matter how long you wait and watch. No virus can ever do these things no matter how long you wait and watch.
But a fertilized ovum can. And does. Conception is the only time when the unique combination of DNA is formed and is the only logical beginning point for a new organism. After conception occurs, the only changes are implantation and development (which BTW continues long after birth).
When what happens at conception and what happens after conception are considered, it becomes obvious that a human being exists and that human being has potential for doing some wonderful things.
Unless she is murdered.
*Holy Mother, please keep
all unborn children safe today.
St. Francis, please pray for all unwanted and hurt animals.*