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Farsight001
Guest
Which is why I pointed out that the dictionary was an OED - so you could check for yourself instead of just taking my word for it.I hope you can understand why I won’t accept your dictionary claim on the basis of your say-so.
Not at all because sentience is an intrinsic trait, like being a parasite. A parasite is so by it’s nature. It is born a parasite, even if it doesn’t have a host yet. It lives as a parasite, even if it is between hosts, and it dies as a parasite - usually from too long without a host. Sentience is the same - an intrinsic trait that an entity either has or it doesn’t. It does not come into and out of being with development or change of said entity. It just is.Again, I recognize that there is a somewhat complicated issue, and my view is there isn’t much difference. But the case is much clearer in the *early *stages of pregnancy: no sentience at all.
Furthermore, you have yet to establish any reason whatsoever that lack of sentience would justify killing anyway.
Singer philosophically argues that it is morally permissible to kill infants. No one should want any part of reasoning like that. Leave the sick minded people to the professionals with the white jackets and the pills.Again, I would recommend that people read this very concise summary: tere.org/assets/downloads/secondary/pdf_downloads/ALevel/PeterSingerAbortion.pdf
I don’t get the impression he was trying to ask a philosophical question at all. It was more of what is the definition of the word. Philosophers can muse and apply meanings however they want. That doesn’t change a definition as the public (especially in this case, the lawmakers) see it. When in the court of law, one wants to define a word, they consult a legal dictionary, not a philosopher. Their definitions are their own, not the whole English-speaking world’s.Did you look at the link? You actually ask a difficult philosophical question. According to the traditional conception, persons are beings who: