scottm123 said:I'm not a biology major or anything, but I'm pretty sure fetuses are what make babies and babies are human beings.
scottm123 said:People think getting rid of an unwanted pregnancy should be a person's right, but I don't see how taking away someone else's chance at life could be a right. Doesn't the person that the fetus will eventually become have rights. With how concerned everyone is for equal rights, equal rights for women, equal rights for minorities, equal rights for gays, I don't see how people care so little about the rights of the person a fetus will become.
Not at the expense of the woman.scottm123 said:Your right we don't allow children to vote just because they will eventually turn 18, but we don't walk up to a child and say you will never be able to vote, children are allowed to grow up, mature, and then vote when they are old enough, don't fetuses deserve this same chance?.
And just because the woman DOES have a personality, you obviously have no problem reducing her to the status of a slave, of chattel.Just because a fetus does not yet have a personality doesn't mean that it won't one day.
ravens24 said:Yes A Fetus Is Living Though Dependant On Its Mother. Fetuses Will Become Humans.if You Are Reading This Then Thank Your Mom For Not Having An Abortion. If You Wish Your Mom Had An Abortion Then Go Commit Suicide Please.
The fetus has not been born yet, it is not alive.
It is still a part of the womans's body.
Not if they are aborted.ravens24 said:Yes A Fetus Is Living Though Dependant On Its Mother. Fetuses Will Become Humans.
GAWD, not that idiotic and stupid stuff AGAIN.:roll: :dohif You Are Reading This Then Thank Your Mom For Not Having An Abortion. If You Wish Your Mom Had An Abortion Then Go Commit Suicide Please.
And we should give a rip?Ethereal said:Afraid not.
An excerpt from Peter Kreeft's essay, "Human personhood begins at conception."
A load of BS Sophistry. Amazing that PL can only debate through deception and misrepresentation. How sad and lame....if the fetus is only a part of the mother, a hilariously absurd consequence follows. The relation of part to whole is what logicians call a transitive relation: If A is part of B and B is part of C, then A must be part of C. If a wall is part of a room and the room is part of a building, then the wall must be part of that building. If a toe is part of a foot and a foot is part of a body, then the toe is part of the body. Now if the fetus is a part of the mother, then the parts of the fetus must be parts of the mother. But in that case, every pregnant woman has four eyes and four feet, and half of all pregnant women have penises! Clearly, the absurd conclusion came from the false premise that the fetus is only part of the mother.
Ethereal said:Afraid not.
An excerpt from Peter Kreeft's essay, "Human personhood begins at conception."
...if the fetus is only a part of the mother, a hilariously absurd consequence follows. The relation of part to whole is what logicians call a transitive relation: If A is part of B and B is part of C, then A must be part of C. If a wall is part of a room and the room is part of a building, then the wall must be part of that building. If a toe is part of a foot and a foot is part of a body, then the toe is part of the body. Now if the fetus is a part of the mother, then the parts of the fetus must be parts of the mother. But in that case, every pregnant woman has four eyes and four feet, and half of all pregnant women have penises! Clearly, the absurd conclusion came from the false premise that the fetus is only part of the mother.
Kandahar said:If you're defining a human being as any entity with human DNA, then yes, a fetus is a human being. But in this sense, I think human means something slightly different. Are all entities with human DNA equally entitled to the right to life? I think not. The question I often ask anti-abortionists is this: What exactly are we trying to preserve when we protect human life? The most common, logically-consistent answers are that we are trying to protect their "thoughts," or their "personality," or their "capacity for rational thinking." This is, after all, the only trait humans have that the animals we routinely kill do not have.
However, a fetus does not have these traits. It's still unclear exactly at what point in development these traits develop, but the evidence suggests that (for the most part) they don't develop until well after birth. That's not to say that infanticide should be legal, because we do need a legal cutoff point for the right to life. We can set the cutoff point at the moment of birth, and still be allowing for plenty of err on the side of protecting human life.Kandahar said:Not trying to be mean, but some retards and people considered vegatable, or someone in a coma don't have those traits. So by what you said we can kill those people to.
And we should give a rip?
A load of BS Sophistry. Amazing that PL can only debate through deception and misrepresentation. How sad and lame.
This guy is such a joke. He's some professor of Philosophy at Boston College
who puts out tons of pro-God books.
He definantly attempts to use logic to come to absurd results, but they really aren't that absurd.
Although it sounds funny because the general human population has two eyes and two feet etc., but really, it comes down to what we possess.
That is not why I was asking if we should care. Should we care about this person's position, as all he spew is a bunch of deceptive and misrepresenting "because I say so" falsehoods.Ethereal said:When citing a source it's usually appropriate to mention its title and authour.
For one the inanely stupid attempt at comparing the woman with a house, as if her body is merely an inorganic, inactive shell. So yes, ther very premise of this stupid argument is unrealistic, not to mention as misogynistic as anything that fundie prolife theocrats spew in their demeaning hate mongering against women.Feel free to validate your claim by pointing out the innacuracies within the text. Oh, wait. You can't do anything except cry because you know he's right.
Should we care about this person's position
as all he spew is a bunch of deceptive and misrepresenting "because I say so" falsehoods.
For one the inanely stupid attempt at comparing the woman with a house, as if her body is merely an inorganic, inactive shell.
So yes, ther very premise of this stupid argument is unrealistic, not to mention as misogynistic as anything that fundie prolife theocrats spew in their demeaning hate mongering against women.
I noticed that you are so much of a coward that you decided to pick at my grammar instead of dealing with the issues I raised. I am not surprised, as prolifers frequently display such cowardice.
A load of BS Sophistry. Amazing that PL can only debate through deception and misrepresentation.
Should we care about this person's position
No. Considering I didn't mention his position. Are you really that neurotic?
as all he spew is a bunch of deceptive and misrepresenting "because I say so" falsehoods.
Lovely grammar. Bravo!
Anyway, I like the way you put quotes around "because I say so" as if he actually said that. Pills wearing off?
For one the inanely stupid attempt at comparing the woman with a house, as if her body is merely an inorganic, inactive shell.
I think you're confusing an anology with a literal interpretation. You see an anology is defined as, "similarity in some respects between things that are otherwise dissimilar."
In an attempt to demonstrate the simalarity of part to whole relationships between two things that are otherwise dissimilar Kreeft uses a house and woman in his example.
How about we use an example that would suite you better.
If a woman has a parasite in her stomach (which, for people like you, is basically the same thing as a fetus) then according to part to whole relationships the woman must also have two nervous systems.
So yes, ther very premise of this stupid argument is unrealistic, not to mention as misogynistic as anything that fundie prolife theocrats spew in their demeaning hate mongering against women.
Some cheese with that wine?
Lovely grammar. Bravo!
Oh, the irony! :roll:Ethereal said:What you can't prove or disprove you cry about, and when you start to lose you run away or resort to name-calling.
....
I don't debate neurotic hypocrits.
Well, as long as you lie and are deceptive, you are not worth anybody's time, of course.So start acting your age or find someone else to debate, because you're not even worth my time.
Ethereal said:A professor of philosophy at Boston College? What a loser!
And you mention this because?
Good sentence. Very logical.
I emboldened those words in order to highlight the redundancy of your statement, i.e., you're comparing what we have with what we posses, which is basically the same thing.
IValueFreedom said:This guy is such a joke.{here is a period, it means the end of the thought} He's some professor of Philosophy at Boston College who puts out tons of pro-God books.{this is to discredit him as an academic. What I'm getting at is that he's a professor who finds a solution, and then views the problem so that it fits his solution instead of someone who looks at the problem, then finds the solution to it. His works are all slanted to his pro-God readers. That's not bad in everyday life, but in the academic community, it has no business there. That's why he's a joke.} He definantly attempts to use logic to come to absurd results, but they really aren't that absurd.{he follows real logic in this excerpt to get absurd conclusions, but the conclusions that he gets aren't necessarily absurd, therefore leaving his argument empty.} This logic that he uses is just fine, and withstands the reductio ad absurdum test.
Although it sounds funny because the general human population has two eyes and two feet etc., but really, it comes down to what we possess.{ When my argument deals with what it means to "possess" something, yes, "have" or a derivative of is quite different than possess. I realize that they're used interchangably in everyday life, but I'm approaching this from a philisophical and logical angle, therefore proper usage of their jargon is appropriate.}
Yes, she has 4 eyes, 4 feet, and 20 toes within her skin.
A common arguement is that he doesn't have the control of the baby's functions.
But if control were to be it, do we control much of our own body? We don't control how our hair grows, we don't control our appendicies, we don't control the hormones that are released. We have many things that we don't have any control over. We cannot will things to work or not work. So if control were to determin possession, then that would leave a large hole there...
Is it a dependency on our actions? Because if so, babies in womb are dependant on their carriers for their survival.
Is it a connection? Because the baby is connected to the mother at all times the the umbilical cord.
Anyways, it's 5:10 now. Work's over and I'm ready to go home. Later folks
Wow, you're an angry individual :\
Or do you just get off on nitpicking other people's posts?
Get an erection from it?
Anyways, I will go thru my post to clarify anything that you might not have gotten
Now if you'd actually like to debate the issues that I've brought up
instead of acting like a jack*** to everyone in this thread who's opinions differ from yours, that would be good.
Oh, and homophobic remarks aren't cool. Grow up.
Ethereal said:No. I got it. It seems you didn't get my post, which I will not take the time to explain since it is fairly straightfoward and debatable.
So you are AGAIN taking the coward's retreat. Once again, we note your inability to discuss the issues brought up in response to your post. How lame and pathetic.Ethereal said:It seems you didn't get my post, which I will not take the time to explain since it is fairly straightfoward and debatable.
thapcballa said:Not trying to be mean, but some retards and people considered vegatable, or someone in a coma don't have those traits. So by what you said we can kill those people to.
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