meltzerboy
New member
I like your discussion of what it means to be human in the context of being a person. There are distinctions to be made here, despite the slippery-slope potential. Note that the personhood amendment, co-sponsored by Paul Ryan (I believe), was rejected by largely pro-life Mississippians because it went too far in declaring an embryo a person.The question is: does something being human automatically make it a person? Again, on the face of it, you are capable of noticing that a collection of human skin cells, by themselves, are not a person. You can notice that a leg, or an arm, is not a person, even though there are plenty of human cells in them. Someone can even lose their legs and their arms and they could still be a person. Why? Obviously, there is something else that makes us into a person, and it seems like it is our minds. As long as the mind is there, there is a person there. This is why people are taken off life-support if brain-dead.
Now, in the early stages of pregnancy, the embryo does not have a brain, so we can presume that there is no person there to kill.
I do. After all, it is the central message. Be selfish and feel self-righteous about it. Still, the most important problem is the bad arguments.
Sure. Anti-intellectuliasm rears its ugly head again.
What is human nature then?
They fail. Ok. Let’s look at the evidence. I will give absolute poverty rates (1960-1991) (40% of U.S. Median household income) pre-welfare and post-welfare (relative poverty rates are similar):
Sweden: 23.7 to 5.8, Norway: 9.2 to 1.7, Netherlands: 22.1 to 7.3, Finland: 11.9 to 3.7, Denmark: 26.4 to 5.9, Germany: 15.2 to 4.3, Switzerland: 12.5 to 3.8, Canada: 22.5 to 6.5, France: 36.1 to 9.8, Belgium: 26.8 to 6.0, Australia: 23.3 to 11.9, United Kingdom: 16.8 to 8.7, United States: 21.0 to 11.7, Italy: 30.7 to 14.3
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welfare%27s_effect_on_poverty
You can also notice that the welfare states consistently perform at the top of every socioeconomic index that matters. Denmark has the highest welfare expenditure as GDP per capita, and has consistently been performing at the top of the newly developed indexes on happiness and well-being. Norway, with a similar, and perhaps even more generous system, has been topping both the HDI-index and the inequality adjusted HDI-index (which is probably more relevant to people’s well-being) for 9 out of the last 11 years, only beaten out by Iceland for two of those years (another generous welfare state).
I just did. But you are right. Even if it improves poverty rates, there are issues with welfare, and supporters will acknowledge this. They know very well that people are influenced by their environment. Conservatives love to say that liberals blame the environment for the misfortunes of individuals, when they want to be self-rightheous and blame individuals instead.
But what is the answer? You can try to improve welfare, but if you take it away, you lose the positive effects, which I have already alluded to with the numbers on poverty.
It could justify killing people in permanent comas, which we do already. Temporary? To much like sleeping. When it comes to mental impairments and dementia, it would depend on what we can reasonably conclude about their mental states. Even the mentally impaired and demented have mental states, and it can be difficult to judge the kinds of mental states they are capable of, so I don’t see this argument justifiying killing these people. But in reality, people with severe dementia and other severe impairments are sometimes allowed to die.
So you have looked into it then? I don’t think there is a person without a mind. I do think that the brain seats our mind. So when the brain is destroyed or haven’t developed yet, there is no person with a mind. This is pretty basic stuff, I would think.
I’ll have to check those pre- and post-welfare poverty statistics as well.