You’ve hit on the crux of it all. Just when does a union of sperm and egg become a human or person.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jul 11, 2022 4:03 pmIt's an artificial category, this "potential human being." What we don't know is at what point a "potential human being" as you call her, is a real human being.commonsense wrote: ↑Fri Jul 08, 2022 8:58 pm My belief is that a human being’s rights, when in conflict with a potential human’s rights, have primacy.
Have at it, if you will.
Fortunately for the anti-abortion people, they don't have to know. They're not going to kill anybody, even "potentially."
But the pro-abortionists"? Even they have to admit that potentially they're killing a human being. So it's on them to show that they're not, and to show it in such a way that no reasonable person can doubt they've got it right. Moreover, they know darn well that the "potential human being" they're killing would, within the 9 months, BE a full "human being" in every possible sense. In fact, that's the payoff they want -- to kill an entity that otherwise would be 100% possessed of the rights and reality of a human child, rather than to bring it to term and adopt her out. That's what they actively WANT. There would be no reason to kill anything if it did not prevent that eventuality.
So the need to explain themselves as not being murderers rests 100% on the shoulders of the pro-abortionists. The anti-abortion folks could, and should, sit back and wait for them to prove that case.
But they cannot, and they know they cannot...not just because the nature of the child is concealed from us in the womb, but because the whole "value" of abortion, it's whole reason for being is, in fact, the ending of the life of a human being.
For the anti-abortion side, the life of a person or human begins at the time the cells are joined. Since this conjoining doesn’t resemble a human, the onus of proof falls on this side to show how, despite appearance, this is a human person. If the anti-abortion people can do that, the other side must admit to killing a human.
For the pro-abortion side, life begins when the product of conception is separated from its placental support system or when it exits the birth canal and breathes on its own. There is no doubt that sperm and egg together is a living organism, but the controversy stems from whether this is a human person or not.
Humans kill all sorts of things that are not human. The crux of the matter is the humanness, not the killing. This begs the question, what determines a human being? This is a question for both sides, in no particular order. For if one side says the other side’s definition is wrong, it accomplishes nothing.
Perhaps what determines a person is not a matter of chronology, but a matter of other characteristics such as whether a fetus can think or move. Since there’s no way to observe thoughts, humanness can only be judged by behavior. For example, a fetus can kick, but it can’t do so without a solid placental attachment to the uterine wall. Maybe the criteria for personhood that the pro side would put forward is completely independent agency.
As for me, I cannot speak for all those who believe that a human isn’t a human until it is borne from the womb. For me, independent agency is not sufficient. I would say there needs to be sentient independent agency. But that raises the debate over whether animals are sentient. Setting that question aside, I would hazard that a human must be an independent sentient agent who possesses the biologic elements of a human of one gender or the other. But even that may be just too simplistic.
Beside all of the above, the majority opinion of women should be the deciding factor. Else there’s legislation without representation.