Direct abortion is about the intentional killing of innocent people. That is murder by any rational definition. Soldiers do not do that. Police do not do that. The state does not do that. That is not self defense.
I disagree.
On occasion, soldiers do do that, and by extension the state.
Consider some of the actions that took place in WWII: air crews would bomb strategic targets like weapons factories, knowing full well that their bombs were so inaccurate that they would inevitably hit surrounding homes and kill innocent people. Despite this, they and their commanders deliberately chose to take an action that would result in the killing of innocent human life.
There are no genetic defects that replicate entire pairs without being fatal.
For argument’s sake, pretend that wasn’t the case. Is your valuation of a fetus
really based on the number of chromosome pairs it has?
What about a tumour? A tumour in a human body will have distinct DNA and 23 chromosome pairs. Do you value the life of a tumour as you would the life of a person?
You have never heard of catatonic schizophrenia? They are not self aware. Your definition requiring self-awareness and reasoning would eliminate infants, and other groups as being people
I didn’t give a definition. I only gave a small sample of questions and said that the determination of what constitutes a “person” is difficult.
Not human? Please tell me what biological classification other than human in which you would categorize it? It’s not an elephant, not a tiger, not an ostrich, not a plant… so what is it?
Arrgh. I’m sure you know full well what I meant. A human fetus is human in the same sense that human hair is human. The fact that something is composed of living tissue with human DNA doesn’t mean that the thing itself is human… and I’d be very surprised if you thought so as well.
However, if you hold regular funerals for your stomach lining, I might be inclined to change my mind.
In the first case, there is no circumstance of emergent nature that compares with people running out of a building during a fire.
Yes, there is: the risk to the mother of childbirth.
In the second, a case that I suspect represents no mother I’ve ever met, you do have the physical aspect of smoke and fire that can prevent saving another even if one wanted to.
In this hypothetical, it doesn’t actually prevent the mother from taking action; it just makes whatever action she takes somewhat more risky.
No, not always. If the mother could have saved the baby and didn’t, she will be charged with negligent homicide, a.k.a. manslaughter.
Now, I’m no lawyer, but AFAIK, the test for negligence is what was reasonable to do in that situation. If a person is reasonable in perceiving an unacceptable danger to their life, then the law wouldn’t compel them to risk themselves.
There is nothing to establish. A fetus is a person, that doesn’t change just because you say so. If you think a developing baby isn’t human, the onus is on you to show it isn’t human. What else is it if it isn’t human?
You’re equivocating. “Human” doesn’t necessarily imply personhood. Human hair, human growth hormone, human nature, and human rights all receive the label “human”, but none of them are persons.
There is nothing difficult about gauging worth. You either value all, or you impose a subjective set of criteria with which to devalue some of it. Can’t reason? I know adults who can’t do that. I know adults who are not self-aware also. Newborns can’t reason, and how do we know if they are self-aware or not at that point? Should we kill them?
Your criteria are subjective as well. If a fertilized egg is a person, then why not an
unfertilized egg? It’s “human”, it has distinct DNA from its parent, and given the right conditions it will grow into a fully-developed human being.
AFAICT, the only reason to decide that a fertilized egg is entitled to special protect that an unfertilized egg is not is the idea of ensoulment at conception… however, this idea itself depends on religious doctrines that can’t be defended with evidence.
The moral imperative your arbitrary system imposes is that the strong are perfectly justified controlling the weak. Anyone stronger than another then gets to impose his will on them. That’s the moral foundation you WANT to have?
I don’t see how you reached that conclusion. Can you connect the dots to show me the chain of thought that led to it?
If you insist on staying on the development idea, what do you say about women when they are 6 years old and don’t have their entire reproductive system in place? They aren’t fully developed; are they any less human than they are at 20?
You do realize that attacking my position does not automatically strengthen yours, right? There are many more alternatives than my opinion and yours.
I suppose you haven’t met many that factor the developing baby’s rights in the equation.
Virtually everyone I know places weight on the rights of developing babies. It’s just that many of them don’t consider fetuses to be babies. And very, very few people I know would try to make the argument that a
blastocyst is somehow a person.