Q
quotidianum
Guest
Actually, to say that “life” does not begin at conception is correct. “Life” does not begin at conception, as both ovum and sperm are invariably alive at the moment, and each have been for some time. If either were dead, conception could not occur. What happens at the moment of (human) conception is that a unique human being is formed, a creature that is 100% human, and therefore 100% a person, and a being with a soul infused by God to his or her human nature.Anyone with a basic understanding of biology would know life begins at conception, “beleif” has nothign to do with it.
You can only be one of two things, alive or dead. Dead things don’t grow… The zygote grows. To say life doesn’t begin at conception is to say the zygote is not alive, which is to say it is dead.
Basically, they’re saying we start life as some kind of zombie zygote, which of course is a level of stupidity on par with some kind of sea slug.
We don’t know when “life” begins, because everything living on this planet, including all humans, animals, plants, bacteria, have come from cells that were already alive. There are no cases in all the labouratories of the world where something that was not alive has been made “alive,” or in other words, “where life has begun.” The best scientists can do is suspend the life functions of an already living creature and prompt out of suspension, but this does not in any way mean they are “creating life.” Wood frogs that can actually freeze, and go into a state with no electrical activity, no respiration, no circulation, no signs of life at all for extended periods of time (a winter season or longer), but can then “thaw” out and start jumping around again. Did they “create life?” No: in this case, the pre-existing life functions have been suspended, and so we certainly don’t say that the frogs “came back to life.”
God started and sustains all life, no doubt. He is the auctor vitae. And God wrote the natural law, under which we and our reproductive activities fall. The obvious and huge exception to this was our Lady’s virginal conception of our Lord, wherein God placed a unique human (and divine) life within our Lady’s wound without the contribution of another person’s genetic material. Also, when Jesus resurrected other people (like Lazarus) from the dead, and when He Himself resurrected, these events truly were miraculous and beyond and regardless the natural law because in resurrecting, He reconnected the soul with the body.
The Catholic definition for “death” is that moment when the soul leaves the body. We do not know exactly when this occurs, which is why traditionally Extreme Unction has been allowed up to 3 hours after death, and today I believe it is 1 hour after death. Because of modern science and technology, we have seen surprising cases where people have been resuscitated from apparent death after ten or even twenty minutes or more without circulation and respiration, and in each of those cases where the person has been successful revived, the soul is there with the person, so we know that the soul does not (at least in every case) instantly leave the body when a person stops breathing. Though for some (saints?) it might. Our souls are very mysterious is so many ways, but when you think about it, it makes perfect sense, as there is *no time *with God, and so what is the difference between an hour and a year to Him? He’s eternal!
Please remember, then, that PERSONHOOD begins at conception, not life. The “life begins at conception” tag-line has actually hampered us in the pro-life movement, because pro-abortion people will then say such silly things such as, “Ah, well, then, by your logical, a man masturbating is the same as abortion, because those sperm are going to die!” (Of course, we Catholics know that masturbation is very wrong for other reasons that have nothing to do with abortion, which is murder) These pro-abortion people will say (correctly), that sperm are alive, so they will say (incorrectly) that it is illogical and unscientific to be pro-life because then we have to say that sperm are “human.” Obviously, they are the ones who are illogical and unscientific, because as gamete cells, sperm contain only half of the genetic material of the parent, and are not distinct creatures by any means, so it is illogical to call something that contains only half of the necessary biological material needed to create a human being a “human being” itself: its like calling a “2” a “4”. Yet there is absolutely nothing logically or scientifically distinct about an fertilized egg that would somehow qualify it as “non-human.” On the contrary, a fertilized egg is certain the product of 2 and 2, or, in other words, is a 4. A fertilized egg is 100% human, and only human—there is nothing else there but HUMAN. They try to call it “tissue,” and this argument is so easily scientifically defeated because “tissue” is somatic, and contains no unique genetic material distinct from the parent somatic cells that could possibility characterize it as an autonomous being, even when it is (like in cancer) mutative, unless these pro-abortion people are going to now claim that people reproduce asexually like single-celled bacteria, or some other nonsense like that (incidentally, even if they did claim that human somatic mutation represents asexual reproduction, they would still be totally wrong, though I wouldn’t put it past them, as “wrong” doesn’t seem like a concept in which they are very interested anyway).
But pro-abortion people are not scientific, because if they were, they would hardly be pro-abortion. Remember, now, a PERSON begins at conception, not life: life is already there!