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Way to move the goal posts.Same would go for abortion at eight months of pregnancy?
Way to move the goal posts.Same would go for abortion at eight months of pregnancy?
Yeah.The moral distinction between terminating a non-viable fetus compared to leaving a newborn to die from exposure?
Not really, just trying to understand your position.Way to move the goal posts.
I doubt that you and I are going to have a productive, good faith conversation about a standardized definition of personhood. Let's just nip it in the bud (no pun intended).Yeah.
I don't have a strong opinion on this issue, although I've started to understand the pro-life side more clearly in recent years. Obviously, opinions differ widely and that is why the framers left this issue to the individual states to work out in accordance with their own values.I doubt that you and I are going to have a productive, good faith conversation about a standardized definition of personhood. Let's just nip it in the bud (no pun intended).
My point is that just because you can't think of good reasons does not mean that do not exist. Each woman and her doctor have to weigh their options with the information that they have available.Other than risk to one's life, what other reasonable excuse is there to wait that long? Risk to one's life really isn't subjective at all. There is always a risk of course, but there is also legitimate high risk scenarios, that are far more concerning than others.
If there isn't a significant risk to one's life, its not much different to me than just putting a pillow over it's face after birth. I'm sure those people had "good reasons" too, and thought about consequences. It doesn't really make much of a difference.
My point is that just because you can't think of good reasons does not mean that do not exist. Each woman and her doctor have to weigh their options with the information that they have available.
One of the most common reasons for later abortions is because severe medical problems with the fetus cannot be detected until later in the pregnancy. Here are some examples of late term pregnancies that were terminated for reasons other than the mother's health.
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2017/apr/18/late-term-abortion-experience-donald-trump
Again, we are only talking about maybe 400 cases a year. Your options are to either scrutinize each event and develop a long, incomplete, and likely unsatisfactory list of conditions in which you would approve it for someone else, or just let the people involved make their own decisions and mind your own business.
A few reasons why I don't think it would happen:I don't have a strong opinion on this issue, although I've started to understand the pro-life side more clearly in recent years. Obviously, opinions differ widely and that is why the framers left this issue to the individual states to work out in accordance with their own values.
Not sure why we couldn't have a "productive, good faith conversation".
You originally called out @Jack V Savage for an opinion on @Ripskater's trolling.
Your interactions with him around here have been antagonistic, so I don't suspect your intention was to carry a good faith argument with him, let alone me.
2) You've already resorted to word-games and goal post moving in your arguments.
Reading comprehension? I repeat: I have no strong opinion on this issue.3) What's to discuss? I take it you think someone is given personhood at or shortly after conception
and I think of it more like a gray area that involves factors like viability and the mother's ongoing consent to occupy the womb. If you want to take a stab at convincing me to your side, I'll try my best to be receptive.
There isn't a moral difference, imo. I'm not against euthanasia for newborn born with a fatal or severe quality of life condition, but if legal that would be up to the parents and doctors. If someone chose to give birth to an infant with those conditions knowing the outcomes, that is up to them. Honestly, giving parents the option in that situation would seem more moral than forcing them to let nature take its prolonged course.There are also conditions discovered after birth. We don't let people execute babies though. What's the moral difference there? If your baby comes out as a vegetable that is in constant pain, that for whatever reason went undetected, you can't kill it. A month earlier in the womb, and you could've.
Where is the moral difference?
There is no difference.What is their excuse for letting it get to that stage? I'm a bit of a fence sitter on the abortion thing, but at that stage, what's the moral difference between that and executing it at birth?
Here's my point of view on personhood.Is there any point at which it ceases to be a gray area? 8.5 months? Two months after birth? Again, I think "viability" is a weird concept to bring into the discussion.
@computer fogie
You asked me on a thread you then locked:
"So you're saying they're wrong. Can you prove that?"
http://forums.sherdog.com/threads/big-caravan-of-latin-americans-headed-to-the-us.3735121/page-51
This was in reference to the BBC's fake news and me "proving it."
The truth is, and we both know this, that no amount of proof I could provide would change your mind, but let's be real about the BBC and "fake news."
In probably the most famous example:
On September 11, 2001 the BBC reported that the Salomon Brothers building (WTC 7) collapsed before it actually collapsed. Hard to explain and most people aren't even aware that the building collapsed much less that it was reported to have happened before it had happened! According to the video linked below, BBC was reporting this collapse beginning at 4:20pm with a rumor, by 4:30 pm the Salomon building collapse was being reported as fact, according to this video. This was more than 50 minutes before it actually collapsed. The interview in the above video cut off just 5 minutes before the collapse.
The concept of viability is important to personhood because until a fetus is viable, it's ability to live is biologically dependent on the mother's body and its existence is completely dependent on the woman's ongoing consent to occupy her body.
When a fetus becomes >50% viable, around the 24 week point, at that point it is theoretically no longer dependent on woman for its survival since it could be sustained medically. At this point, I would consider the fetus a separate entity from it's mother and believe that it has a right to life beyond its the woman's consent.
Except that the hostages have personhood, or at least a much greater degree of personhood than a fetus.This reasoning would seem to lead us to the conclusion that a hostage has no right to life because the hostage's existence is completely dependent on the hostage-taker's consent.
Again, you are playing around with definitions of viability and dependency and that is not productive to the conversation. If you insist on a tactic to try to trip me up on words, I'm not going to take that as a sign of good faith.At that stage, the fetus is still completely dependent on someone else for survival. Same goes for a newborn infant. Yet we don't allow medical staff who are sustaining the infant to decide to terminate the life of the infant even if doing so would make their lives easier. Why is that?
Yours was the last post, period.I didn't lock that thread, you made a wrong assumption that I did.
No, that was one glaring example. I could go on for pages.So because of this 9/11 video (can't watch it at work, but the premise a little far-fetched for me), you assume that everything the BBC says that you don't like is false, forever. OK...
Except that the hostages have personhood, or at least a much greater degree of personhood than a fetus.
Can you be clearer about you definition of "personhood"?Here's my point of view on personhood.
I would consider there being different tiers or even a spectrum of personhood, a fertilized egg at one end and an adult of sound mind on the other, with each of those tiers having different legal rights or privileges based on their ability to influence their surroundings.
That's overly simplified, but yes. It would be more accurate to that an adult enjoys full rights and privileges of personhood, a child enjoys less and a newborn baby less than that. Privileges can be broadly defined, but think of things along the lines of free will, communication, consent, responsibility, etc.Can you be clearer about you definition of "personhood"?
Under your hierarchy, an adult is more of a person than a child, and a child is more of a person than a toddler?