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View Poll Results: Abortion, terminate when? | |||
Never | 19 | 12.18% | |
Up to one month | 5 | 3.21% | |
Up to two months | 7 | 4.49% | |
Up to three months | 42 | 26.92% | |
Up to four months | 14 | 8.97% | |
up to five months | 7 | 4.49% | |
Up to six months | 25 | 16.03% | |
Up to seven months | 1 | 0.64% | |
Up to eight months | 17 | 10.90% | |
Infanticide is OK | 19 | 12.18% | |
Voters: 156. You may not vote on this poll |
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05-15-2003, 02:57 AM | #501 | |||||||||||||||||
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And if another living member of genus homo were found, LWF would immediately limit human family to be specific to the species level. The fact is, he's not interested in preserving the life of all sentient species, he's just interested in preserving the life of one. From the tolerant people of the world: <deleted by moderator>. Quote:
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And LostGirl, I know the feeling. Every day I wake up to find another of LWF's posts and I wonder "do I really want to face another blast of illogic?" |
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05-15-2003, 03:08 AM | #502 | |
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05-15-2003, 07:45 AM | #503 | |
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05-15-2003, 03:32 PM | #504 | |
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05-15-2003, 03:58 PM | #505 | |
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Is it permissable to kill a fetus in order to stop the co-option of my body which will come to affect every aspect of my life, if I do so long before the fetus has any chance of surviving with out me? Personally, I think I can, and I would. What about the analogy of living out in the middle of nowhere and finding a baby on your doorstep? The baby cannot possibly survive without action taken by you and you alone. Like Jinto, can you knowingly fail to bring the baby into your house, feed, and nurture it until it can be taken off your hands and consider yourself to be acting morally? Secondly, I'd like to compare the personhood/human being status of a fetus as an individual organism or example of a unique homo sapiens, to a hypothetical idea. I get the impression this sort of thing is encouraged by some people in this thread. What if, after death, your body was raided and a portion of living cells, living tissue was removed before they totally died. The rest of your body, most certainly your brain, is left to rot in a coffin somewhere whilst the living tissue is stored in a self-contained apparatus which provides them with everything they need to continue living at the level of cellular (ie, organelle) function. These cells could be maintained in this living state indefinitely. They would comprise a totally unique specimen of homo sapiens genome, with the potential to one day be cloned into an embryonic stem cell and one day become you again. It would be more of an individual organism than a fetus. Is this something you would want for yourself? What would the rights of this self-contained "bottle" of you, as opposed to a fetus? Ah, Sheri S. Tepper, who is an author who recently published a book called the Visitor, is the originator of this bottling idea. Credit where it's due. Interesting proposition. First, the bottle of human cells would not be more of an individual organism than a fetus. It may be a more independent organism than a fetus. Independence, of course, being no criterion for whether a thing is an organism or not. Secondly, the solution is very simple. Is the life form a living member of the family Hominidae and genus homo? If so, it has human rights. If not it does not. While the mass of cells which represent a part of an individual human may have the potential to become an idividual human, it does not have human rights until it does. A fetus is already an individual human. A part of a member of the family Hominidae and genus homo is not a human being, though it may be a collection of cellular organisms which once belonged to a human and may one day produce a human. Only an actual human can have human rights. The "bottle of me" ought to have the same fundamental rights as sperm and egg cells. The conceptus ought to have the same fundamental rights as an adult human. |
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