IdiotsOpposite
Boom, headshot.
Sperm are haploid sex cells. Come on now. This is like sixth grade biology.
You had biology in sixth grade? Lucky. I had to wait until 10th.
Sperm are haploid sex cells. Come on now. This is like sixth grade biology.
Sperm are haploid sex cells. Come on now. This is like sixth grade biology.
Are you referring to me?Well, I've never heard anyone who knows modern science argue that sperm are alive, but I've heard plenty of "Pro-choice" people use it to try to argue against the apparent "Silliness" of our position.
Ziggy Stardust said:GhostWriter, right from the bat to avoid confusion, this will not be an analogy directed towards the validity of the pro-life argument.
Imagine someone reasoning to ban masturbation because that someone is convinced that sperm is just as much human as an embryo for whatever reason
I'll grant you that, you've been remarkably polite, level-headed and respectful. And even quite open-minded.Hiya! We've been doing a relatively good job at not chain spamming insults at each other, and most of the pro-lifers in this thread seem to have had enough for now and gone to sleep. Think we can dress this sentiment up a little more than the standard posturing?![]()
The ironic thing is I actually respect that point of view, (deliberately scratched the arbitrary part, since this actually is based on a conviction which has nothing to do with defining a person, but rather a religious believe). Not to base legislation on, but because it's honest and I do understand the opposition to abortion better when that argument is used than when that view is a motivator for starting to define personhood as one sees fit to have that coincide with the moment, at which point the arbitrary part rears it's ugly head again.no leg to stand beside "there is some kind of invisible soul"
There is murder only if you kill a person, not if you just destroy some cells.
In fact, you can notice the point is still being ignored by every pro-lifer here. Despite having been raised several times. That says it all.
But by the same token, bringing the foetus to term involves a series of deliberate interventions- breathing, eating, moving around, none of these things happen apart from the human actually doing them. Inaction, in this case, would be lying down on the ground and staying perfectly still until you die, which is just as much a certain oblivion for the foetus as an abortion.If I have to draw a line it lies with action. I have to take an action to "start" a human. Failing to take that action means it never is. The comparison to choosing not to save somebody who is drowning(as used before) isn't quite a good match. If you don't procreate that person never is. Once pregnant, though, abortion is an active action taken to stop that embryo from developing sentience.
Action seems fair but not strong enough for a ban, and in principle it would need to include contraception. Because there isn't much difference in an embryo and one which is about to be in those regards.Animal rights are complex as well.
If I have to draw a line it lies with action. I have to take an action to "start" a human. Failing to take that action means it never is. The comparison to choosing not to save somebody who is drowning(as used before) isn't quite a good match. If you don't procreate that person never is. Once pregnant, though, abortion is an active action taken to stop that embryo from developing sentience.
I don't think this can be entirely rational, but that is ok. We aren't entirely rational beings.
Inaction, in this case, would be lying down on the ground and staying perfectly still until you die, which is just as much a certain oblivion for the foetus as an abortion.
Animal rights are complex as well.
If I have to draw a line it lies with action. I have to take an action to "start" a human.
That's fair enough.I will willingly stipulate, loudly, that bringing a child to term is a helluva lot of work. I am not asking for a little from those with unwanted pregnancies. I am asking for a lot. Forming an adoption plan gives a lot as well. It's worth asking for, it's worth begging for, and it's worth more than my pride. Personal value judgements may vary.
It's more realistic, I'll grant you that, but it doesn't mean that it's any more likely. It's more realistic (or, at least, less unrealistic) that I'd jump over the Empire State Building than that I'd jump over the Taipei Tower, but both have an equal probability of occurring.That said, it's still more realistic than jumping over the Empire State building so long as you weren't born on Krypton.
I get what you're saying, and I admit that it can seem counter-intuitive to pose "lie down and die" as the passive option. However, I think this confuses everyday speech for ontology, and it's important when discussing an ethical issue of this weight to rid ourselves of the prejudices of daily life. We need to understand activity as being fundamentally a matter of engagement with the world, and therefore inactivity as a refusal of engagement; whether or not any particular process of engagement is typical or exceptional is really neither here nor there.Suicide by inaction is not really functionally on point with what I was saying. A total refusal to act in any way would be so far out of the norm of human behavior that it in itself would be more likely considered an active action than would be going on with "life as normal." A hunger strike is generally considered an endeavor even if it itself is merely the failure to eat. If a woman is indeed suicidal I would hope we can properly identify this and offer any and all medical/medicinal help available.
It isn't necessary to prove the non-existence of a soul, any more than it's necessary to prove the non-existence of Zeus. We simply observe that there does not appear to be any reason why we should believe such a thing exists, and go about our business as if it did not. The burden of proof lies squarely with those making the positive claim of the existence of an immaterial essence, so I don't see why that's an "underlying problem" for anyone but them.The underlining problem is no one can define when life begins. Science has theories; religion has faith. NO ONE has cold hard facts. It may be a clump of cells or an emerging life with a soul attached. No one can prove 100% one way or another.
The underlining problem is no one can define when life begins. Science has theories; religion has faith. NO ONE has cold hard facts. It may be a clump of cells or an emerging life with a soul attached. No one can prove 100% one way or another.
As for potential, natural, whatever, that means you're a murderer if you masturbate since you're 'unnaturally' killing off lots of 'potential' life-makers. A woman who has a period is a murderer for not making an effort to cause that egg to produce life. While you're at it, why don't you charge the person with 1000 counts of murder for removing the potential for desendants.
I'm getting a migraine from this already.
The already-living should take priority over the unknown living, not the other way around. Abortion is already a tough, terrible choice. The people going through it should be supported and/or offered options, not treated as cold-blooded killers.
Finally, using religion to justify banning abortion kills the argument right then and there. Just because your holy book tells you that cells are a living person doesn't mean another's will as well.
Effort is required in order to coax the sperm out of its natural environment
I get what you're saying, and I admit that it can seem counter-intuitive to pose "lie down and die" as the passive option. However, I think this confuses everyday speech for ontology, and it's important when discussing an ethical issue of this weight to rid ourselves of the prejudices of daily life. We need to understand activity as being fundamentally a matter of engagement with the world, and therefore inactivity as a refusal of engagement; whether or not any particular process of engagement is typical or exceptional is really neither here nor there.
So to refer to the most discussed alternative - electronic cars - I take it the expensiveness of those, their short range of operation, the long time it takes to recharge them and the short life-expectancy of the batteries all are not relevant? Or perhaps those are all lies facilitated by you know who?
I don't think that it makes sense to embrace woolliness of thought just because it's familiar. That's a rejection of critical thought in favour of possibly groundless certainties, an abandonment of basic intellectual responsibility. It's not about making decisions in a vacuum (whatever you mean by this), but attempting to apprehend the world as it really is, or, at least, as we really experience it, rather than settling for how this-or-that received ideology tells us we experience it. It's not enough to say "I am used to thinking like this", one must be able to say "I am justified in thinking like this", and I don't think that we're at all justified in describing mundane engagement as passivity.I'm not going to go along with you here. Ethical issues do not functionally take place in a frictionless vacuum of logic. The vaguely masturb...ah..."coaxurbatory" process of evaluating decisions in a vacuum might but fun, and it is important to do, but it is ultimately of limited use. The prejudices of daily life and everyday speech are the context and language in which those who face this decision understand it and make it.