That means there are not any in the real world then.we usually distinguish "rights" from "rules that only count for some people" as separate categories.
That means there are not any in the real world then.we usually distinguish "rights" from "rules that only count for some people" as separate categories.
That means there are not any in the real world then.
(I don't know that fetal personhood is that big a deal, given that we don't allow one individuals personhood to override another in other situations)
This is the point. We are quite willing to give and take rights independent of "personhood", so it never is any absolute question of personhood but what rights are appropriate in what situation.i'm not familiar with many cases where a human being is denied personhood outright for legal purposes, and when it happens it's often considered some form of atrocity. sometimes one person gets rights or just desires prioritized over others, whether that's appropriate or not depends on context.
Many people do not view the mother as a human being, just an incubator.I mean, dead potential organ donors' bodily autonomy is set higher than living humans personhood. The hypothetical violinist etc.
Even if fetal personhood were objectively established, when would it override that of the mother's?
I'm not sure what you're saying here. In Canada, rights aren't triggered until birth. At that point, there is some 'going back in time' to adjudicate things that aren't decided until the triggering of that right, but these aren't completely inconsistent. We will often change the legal consequences of early behavior based on the actual outcome.it is not special at all unless you consider fetal personhood. it is no more a question of rights than basic trauma surgery or routine testing without that. i don't want to get into the weeds of insurance and covered procedure stuff, that's outside thread scope.
No, it's assault on the mother if you attack the mother and kill the fetus (in Canada). That part is consistent. The edge case is when damaging the mother causes the homicide of the delivered baby. It's easy if it's an external actor. Obviously it gets weirder if there are fewer parties. My suspicion is the vagueness here is intentional, since helping mothers will butt up against restricting their behaviour, in the practical sense.that would imply inconsistency, though. "shrodinger's personhood" is objectively broken law. but i'll just chalk this up to the actual rules being unclear, since you don't seem sure yourself and think it's broadly assault alone, which is consistent.
Yes, there are strong emotions. But, a reasonable portion of that will be due to false beliefs. AND, another reasonable portion will be because of the noise of people who actually don't care about any talk of personhood that doesn't include timepoint zero. AND a cohort that doesn't value maternal care enough. In Canada, where healthcare is a right and where abortion is healthcare, proper maternal care matters more with regards to any potential atrocities than a further clarification of the law would.if that were true this would not be a controversial topic with dozens of pages here and years of heavy discussion/strong emotions behind it.
(I don't know that fetal personhood is that big a deal, given that we don't allow one individuals personhood to override another in other situations)
so it never is any absolute question of personhood but what rights are appropriate in what situation.
Even if fetal personhood were objectively established, when would it override that of the mother's?
I'm not sure what you're saying here. In Canada, rights aren't triggered until birth. At that point, there is some 'going back in time' to adjudicate things that aren't decided until the triggering of that right, but these aren't completely inconsistent. We will often change the legal consequences of early behavior based on the actual outcome.
Yes, there are strong emotions. But, a reasonable portion of that will be due to false beliefs. AND, another reasonable portion will be because of the noise of people who actually don't care about any talk of personhood that doesn't include timepoint zero.
proper maternal care matters more with regards to any potential atrocities than a further clarification of the law would.
(I don't know that fetal personhood is that big a deal, given that we don't allow one individuals personhood to override another in other situations)
if that's the stance why stop at 0 or set the 0 point arbitrarily though :/.
You note only your interpretation.i note the handwaving of personhood again here. again.
Given that you are neither Canadian nor someone who is capable of getting pregnant, I don't see why your side trip into vaccine mandates is relevant.rights don't only count sometimes. once you codify rights, you have them or you don't.
if you say i don't, don't expect me to agree that you do.
I have no idea. It's not something that I ever considered necessary to research."abortion rights" is a wrong-question, legally speaking. the state has no legitimate interest in abortions unless the fetus is legally a person. if the fetus is legally a person, then presumably killing it becomes a non-trivial violation of its charter rights. unless you're talking about situations where the mother's health is in danger and the implied tradeoffs (which can even implicate self defense and such), this is not a "medical matter", but a question of whose rights take priority. it's a matter of when the fetus can/does possess individual rights, legally. that is literally the only thing that can elevate the state to having any business in a person's choice of medical procedures on themselves. that probably should be codified. canada chose "not until born" if i'm not mistaken, one of the few places in the world where that's true. i don't agree with that, but i don't live in canada and they can/will operate that way if they want regardless of my preferences.
i wonder, if a mother is assaulted in canada and the fetus dies, is the criminal charged with murder, or just assault? i presume not, based on the above, and that the criminal should rightly get murder charges tossed in the bin by the judge based on canadian law and only be charged with assault and maybe property damage (???).
i don't think maternal care solves the question of personhood triggering. "good maternal care" is uncontroversially positive, though some people instead disagree on what is "good" vs not.
As long as it's understood that not all women are fit to be mothers. Many aren't, and unfortunately some of them either don't know this or don't care. If society ever goes the way of people having to apply for permission to have children (a situation often encountered in science fiction settings where people live in space habitats or new colonies where reproduction and population growth have to be carefully managed so the demand doesn't outstrip the supply), it should be mandatory for both prospective parents to receive counseling and parenting courses so they have a better idea of what they're applying to get into for the next 18 years and 9 months.What we need are mandatory vasectomies for all men at the age of puberty. Once they've settled down, their wife/girlfriend can file a petition and a panel of (women) judges will decide if he's allowed to have children, at which point his procedure will be reversed.
If a definition's inconvenient, then people will change the definition. Just work backwards from the preferred outcomebecause that's not what the word "rights" means, at least not under the definition i'm used to operating under. similar to how we anticipate different things when we hear the word "squid" vs "tire iron". those constrain anticipation to things we expect to see, and things we do not expect to see.
we usually distinguish "rights" from "rules that only count for some people" as separate categories. you don't have to, per se', but it will result in confusion.
Love it. So literally true and factually accurate in a very mundane, boring sense, but simultaneously so cosmically awesome and abstract. Happy belated birthday Valka BTW, cent' anni.having recently completed my 59th trip around the Sun
Thank you!Love it. So literally true and factually accurate in a very mundane, boring sense, but simultaneously so cosmically awesome and abstract. Happy belated birthday Valka BTW, cent' anni.
EDIT: For thread relevance... I just thought about whether the time as a passenger in Mom's belly counts as a trip. Obviously you weren't counting that. To be clear, I'm not looking for an answer... it just popped into my mind because of the thread.
I will say, upon reflection, that we often tell my younger son that he's "been to Italy", because my wife was pregnant with him when we visited there. Obviously, its said in jest, and he knows because he always protests... "Mommy/Daddy, that doesn't count". Which, upon further reflection makes me think about the impact/importance of what actually counts.
Corporations are people, and they can be "killed" at will.personhood tends to require extreme circumstances to merit killing the person. usually self defense, or states that allow it as punishment for homicide.