G
gearhead
Guest
It always has value. A single human hair has value. However, the question is when that value reaches a point where it warrants taking away other things of value… freedom, for instance.But they are human life. When does human life have value in your opinion?
A toddler is a person. So is a college graduate and a retiree. However, a toddler is not a college graduate, and a person who just graduated from college is not a retiree. In the same way, a fetus is not a baby.Is a fetus a baby or a baby a toddler or a toddler a college graduate or a college graduate a retiree? At what stage does human life have value? The right parts are there from sperm-egg fusion…
It’s really not that difficult a concept. And I’m not trying to slip any moral judgements in here; you’re free to say that a fetus is a person if you want (though I’d personally like it if you backed up this assertion with something of substance). My point is that calling a fetus a baby does slip in a moral judgement, since “baby” necessarily implies “person”.
If you want to argue that a fetus is a person, fine, but do it on the merits of the issue. It bothers me when people try to win the argument through semantic trickery.