@Eris
I didn't even make an argument. I only asked some question to gauge your level of intelligence and open mindedness to see if it's even worth making an argument.
@Eris
I asked about personhood, not humanity.
@Eris
Nope. You can call a strand of hair human, but you can't call it a person.
@Eris
Congrats, you just agreed with me that "person" is not the same as "human". As you just discovered yourself, "human" is a subclass of "person".
@Eris
Saying "human object is part of person" excludes the other way around being possible. Which makes it impossible for person = human.
@Eris
You literally started with "person is a DISCRETE human being" and ended up with "hair is person" JUST so you don't admit you could be wrong about something.
@Eris
You gaslight yourself in changing your own definition of "person".
@Eris
You've started our discussion by stating that distinct human beings is what constitutes a person.
Now you're stating that body parts of a human (as opposed to a full distinct human being) is what constitutes a person.
You're contradicting yourself.
Not to mention that the first thing people will think about when hearing "person" is a distinct individual functioning mind. It's why we don't really call a skeleton or a putrefying body a person anymore. And last I checked, your foot doesn't have a mind of it's own.
@Eris
A slice of cake is a slice of cake. It is not a distinct individual cake. A slice of cake does not share all properties of the full cake. Yes, it does share some properties, but not all of them.
@NEETzsche @critical @Eris
Is fapping and cumming in a tissue the same as an abortion? Checking your definitions on everything now... who knows what the hell people will come up with next.
@Samhydeigger @critical @NEETzsche @Eris
The only reason that works for Christians is because they add in the concept of the soul at the same time. It's not just the "life" part that is important for them, it's that the life has a soul that is critical. Of course this brings in a lot more theological problems that Christians are usually unaware of, like how do twins' souls work, or do the countless miscarried pregnancies also have souls?
And not to mention that this goes out the window when you're talking with either a non-believer, or someone who's religion is far too different than mainstream Christianity.
@Samhydeigger @critical @NEETzsche @Eris
Life begins with each and every cell division.
@Eris @critical @NEETzsche @Samhydeigger
That's something I need to ask you. Or rather Samhydeigger I guess, but you can answer too.
@Samhydeigger @critical @NEETzsche @Eris
What do you mean by "a human life"? Do you mean the life of something with human DNA? The life of a person that is human? Or something else.
@Tepid_Tapir @critical @NEETzsche @Eris @Samhydeigger
Here's why your definition is faulty: someone that died very recently still has most of the cells in his body alive. There is more "human life" in them than a freshly fertilized embryo. And excluding Siamese twins is just... wow... I don't even know what to say to that. I'm utterly confused tbh. The more I read that sentence, the less I understand what you mean to say.
This is why I fall back to personhood. The person element goes away when they die and Siamese twins can still be 2 distinct persons.
Another thing that confuses me: "one that has genetic code working autonomously". A fetus is anything but autonomous. For most of the 9 months, it simply cannot be autonomous if it ends up out of the womb through some form of premature birth. Even if you're talking just about DNA strands replicating by themselves, they're still not autonomous, as they require material from the body/fetus to do so, so it still requires the body/fetus to be autonomous itself. I can only assume you meant something different by "autonomous".
>Would you consider a retarded horse a horse?
Yes. A retarded human is a human. Even a brain dead human is a human, but I don't think I'd call them a person anymore.
@Eris @critical @NEETzsche @Samhydeigger @Tepid_Tapir
>Okay? Does the quantity matter?
It shows that the words chosen are imprecise enough and inadequate for the abortion discussion.
>I would call a set of "siamese twins" one person, not two
Except they're two persons. Even Siamese twins that are joined at their head/brain region have 2 clear distinct minds, with distinct personalities and so on. They are 2 people.
>And for some reason we are all supposed to shift to using your language instead of you accommodating us
You don't have to do anything. I merely probed to see if our definitions are the same, or at least close enough. They aren't. I think we can agree on that. As such I stated that the conversation cannot continue to the abortion topic because we'd be starting from different premises due to our different definitions. You're the one insisting to still have the discussion and making me accommodate to your definitions.
@Eris @critical @NEETzsche @Samhydeigger @Tepid_Tapir
False. A mutation is natural. It might not be a good natural occurrence, but it's still part of how nature works.
@Eris @critical @NEETzsche @Samhydeigger @Tepid_Tapir
Mutations ARE in a biological entity's nature.
@Eris @critical @NEETzsche @Samhydeigger @Tepid_Tapir
You fail at the most basic biological facts, and you want to argue abortion? Really?!
@alyx @critical @NEETzsche @Eris @Samhydeigger I think you must be getting tired because you’re completely missing every one of my points. I’ll try to reiterate
someone that died very recently still has most of the cells in his body alive. There is more “human life” in them than a freshly fertilized embryo.
Firstly source, because what I consider dead is most certainly very dead, and idk how they’remeasuring the dna activityof a fetus vs that of a dead person. I’m guessing whatever article you read was looking at people who could be theoretically revived. Also I don’t understand why the amount here matters. Is a fat person more alive than an thin one because they have more cells? The point is DNA (or RNA) continuing to function for life. I wouldn’t consider say a severed finger alive because it still has red blood cells. I guess in tandem should have been emphasized.
And excluding Siamese twins is just… wow… I don’t even know what to say to that. I’m utterly confused tbh. The more I read that sentence, the less I understand what you mean to say.
That doesn’t surprise me, it’s the greyest area I have that also offends people. I’m not saying Siamese twins are not humans, or even that siamese twins can have different consciousness. Siamese twins that share the same DNA working in tandem aren’t going to live very long - they usually sacrifice one in surgery or let both die. That’s because it’s one human. The vast vast majority are two individuals (but often still need to sacrifice one due to shared organs).
This is why I fall back to personhood.
Personhood is an even more variable term than human that would be even harder to prove your point lol if you want to do it legally it will change by state. There is no legitimate scientific standard for person like there is human or life. So it’s just a game of ‘this is what I say it is’ type shit. I hate that shit. I need my opinions backed by something grounded, not just my personal opinions.
I think you should take a break for the night though you seem to be missing a lot, I am guessing it’s due to being tired.
A fetus is anything but autonomous.
Yeah you completely missed the term autonomous. I’ll water it down to ‘teamwork’. Think of it as working as a team towards a common goal, said goal being to help an organism live. It’s a bit more complicated than that but so far I’ve had to go super in depth into what I thought was pretty simple concepts so I don’t really feel like getting into thick biology subjects but I can give text recommendations if you genuinely want one.
but I don’t think I’d call them a person anymore.
Person is extremely subjective which is why I dislike it over more black and white terms like human and life.
@Tepid_Tapir @critical @NEETzsche @Eris @Samhydeigger
>Firstly source, because what I consider dead is most certainly very dead
We're doing "very dead" now? Ok, I'm done. When even the definition of "dead" is apparently not clear, you know you've reached peak "impossible to discuss" territory.
I'm not even reading the rest of it. I'm too tired at this point...
"Very dead"... jesus fuck dude...
>There is more "human life" in them than a freshly fertilized embryo.
Okay? Does the quantity matter?
>The more I read that sentence, the less I understand what you mean to say.
Makes perfect sense to me. I would call a set of "siamese twins" one person, not two. It's just that that person's body developed unnaturally.
>Yes. A retarded human is a human. Even a brain dead human is a human, but I don't think I'd call them a person anymore.
So everyone else in this conversation has a shared understanding of human, but YOU have a very particular understanding of "person" as being distinct from that. And for some reason we are all supposed to shift to using your language instead of you accomodating us.