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Old 03-20-2002, 03:40 PM   #41
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Hey kids...don't make me come in there or you're gonna get it....

In all seriousness guys, it's an emotional topic, I know but please try to keep it to a dull roar, and disagree as nicely as possible considering the subject...your cooperation is appreciated

Carry on
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Old 03-20-2002, 04:43 PM   #42
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Originally posted by bd-from-kg:
<strong>
By the way, have you heard of adoption?</strong>
Of course. It's the one size fit's all answer. How original. Well, thanks for the debate. I see the only answers I will hear are your insightful explanations about how it's a life as soon as it's a zygote. I don't agree.
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Old 03-20-2002, 05:01 PM   #43
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Originally posted by bd-from-kg:

Ah, now I understand. The purpose of legalizing abortion is, after all, to protect the unborn child, just like the other laws restricting the rights of children. [/QB]
What other laws are you talking about?

I never said anything about the unborn unchild
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Old 03-21-2002, 10:27 AM   #44
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tronvillain:

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Yes, a fertilized human egg is a distinct complete organism of the species Homo sapiens, and it is a member of the species Homo sapiens, but the latter does not follow from the former.
Well, yes, actually it does. Of course to make this rigorous one would have to define exactly what one means by “complete”, but obviously a fertilized egg is a complete member of the human species in a sense in which a heart, for example, is not. I saw no point (and still don’t) in getting into this in great detail since it isn’t all that relevant. Being “complete” in the sense I had in mind is not a necessary condition for qualifying as a human being, but it is certainly sufficient.

If my position were (as you seem to be assuming) that being a member of the human species automatically and by definition qualifies an individual as being entitled to legal protection, this subject might be worth discussing in more detail. But that’s not my position, so it isn’t.

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Actually, we're talking about whether a given human being is a human being in the sense of being a member of the species Homo sapiens or a human being in the sense of being a person.
The standard practice in discussing abortion is to use “human being” to mean a member of the species Homo sapiens and “person” to mean someone entitled to legal protection. That’s how I’ve been using these terms, and part of what I’ve been doing is to encourage others to do the same so that we have a common vocabulary to work with.

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Since we potentially assign different values to different things, level of development is a relevant consideration ...
But we do not treat people differently under the law on the basis of level of development, except in the sense that I noted in my reply to Jamie_L (i.e., people at a lower level of development are given some “special” rights and denied others for their own protection). What we do not do (with the exception of legalizing abortion) is deny legal protection to some because they are at a low “level of development”. Legal abortion is a unique anomaly in our legal system.

And we absolutely do not treat people differently under the law based on how much they are “valued”. To do so would be an outrageous breach of our duty to treat everyone equally and impartially under the law.

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Now, it's possible that despite things having different values we will choose to protect them equally, but an argument has to be made for this.
It isn’t just possible that we might choose to do so. We have made a principled decision to do so. I explained the reasons for adopting this principle at some length in the “12-week-fetus” thread cited earlier and will presumably do so here in due course.

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You talked a lot about what the "rights" of children, but where do they get those rights? Well, adults value children highly (often more than other adults, especially their own children) so they give them those rights and enforce them. If adults didn't value children, then it is quite likely that children wouldn't have any rights at all.
That doesn’t follow at all. We also give legal protection to senile 95-year-olds with no living relatives, who are of no apparent value to society and whom no one cares about. We do not give the same kind of legal protection to a pet cat, even if its owner cares about it deeply. Our decisions as to whom to extend legal protection to are not based on who is the more “valued”. It would seem that you have little understanding of the foundations of our legal system.

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Your argument appears to amount to asserting that people should value a fertilized egg, so they should give it rights. This is not a compelling argument.
Let me say it again: this isn’t about who people “value” or “should” value. In view of the fact that our legal system is based on equal protection of the law for all human beings, the burden falls on those who want to make an exception to this principle to justify doing so. In other words, if advocates of legal abortion cannot make a compelling positive case for making an exception to this principle, the pro-life position wins by default.

[ March 21, 2002: Message edited by: bd-from-kg ]</p>
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Old 03-21-2002, 10:48 AM   #45
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Most IVF procedures involve a shot-gun approach to fertilization - fertilize a lot of eggs and implant several into the mother in hopes that one or more will successfully "take". As I understand it, the process often leaves extra fertilized embryos that remain frozen for potential future use.

If the parents successfully get the number of children they desire, is it morally acceptible to destroy the remaining embryos? Should it be legally acceptible? If the stance is taken that a fetus is a life deserving substantial rights as soon as it is created in the mother (the typical pro-life stance), does this apply to IVF embryos as well? If abortion were illegal, would the parents creating IVF embryos have the same obligation to make sure all the embryos get carried to term in the same way that they would be obligated to do so if they had created a fetus through normal sexual intercourse?
Jamie
And one more question, haven't these couples ever heard of adoption? My guess is that they have and for personal reasons they have decided this is not how they want to create their family or were unable to adopt. Which they do have the right to just as a woman has the right to forgo adoption as the answer to her unwanted pregnancy.
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Old 03-21-2002, 11:28 AM   #46
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bd-from-kg:
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The standard practice in discussing abortion is to use “human being” to mean a member of the species Homo sapiens and “person” to mean someone entitled to legal protection. That’s how I’ve been using these terms, and part of what I’ve been doing is to encourage others to do the same so that we have a common vocabulary to work with.
Okay. For the record I was probably confusing terms in some of my previous posts. I will accept that a zygote/embrio/fetus is a "human being" under this definition. To restate my opinion in the these terms, I think level of development is important to determining whether the zygote/embrio/fetus is a "person" and entitled to legal protections.

So, I would say it is not necessarily an inconsistency in the law for abortions to be legal during levels of development at which do not qualify as a person.

And, to restate my unfertilized egg/zygote comparisson: What is it about the fertilized egg that makes it a person the instant after conception?

Jamie
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Old 03-21-2002, 11:30 AM   #47
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Quote:
Originally posted by bd-from-kg:
By the way, have you heard of adoption?

Yes. And how many children from unwanted pregnancies have you adopted? What gives a couple the right to continue an unplanned pregnancy, give birth, and then depend upon the kindness of strangers to provide for this child until they reach adulthood? While many couples are looking to adopt healthy infants in this country, there are many other children who are not considered "adoptable".

This is a tough area for me because I have a beautiful adopted son and I am very grateful to his birthparents for placing him with us. But, I get frustrated with anti-abortionists who see adoption as a cure-all for unplanned pregnancies.

I have also been in the position of having to terminate a pregnancy to preserve my own life. Emotionally, that 6 week old embryo was the hope for a baby I had been wanting for years. Was it a human being? It had the potential to become my child, but it was no more than that. Do not think that terminating that hope was easy, but it was certainly not murder.

[edited to fix quote]

[ March 21, 2002: Message edited by: callina ]</p>
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Old 03-21-2002, 12:25 PM   #48
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Quote:
Originally posted by echoes:
Even in a case such as this, population growth elsewhere can have an effect. There are too many factors to be able to say that there is NO impact. And while it may not apply here because the government is behind the lack of food, in another situation population growth elsewhere might reduce available imports, reducing the food supply.

And then of course the Sudanese population keeps on growing...
Echoes, the Sudanese example highlights many of the reasons I object so strongly to the so-called overpopulation problem. Here overpopulation is clearly a symptom, not a cause. Those who suggest that we must strongly attack the overpopulation problem are risking the application of simply more totalitarianism on an already oppressed population. Overpopulation becomes an simplistic mask to disguise the true causes of human suffering.

Then many of our priorities inappropriately shift to treating symptoms, leaving the true causes firmly in place.

Rather than risk dragging the original discussion further off-topic, if you want to respond, please do so in the recent overpopulation threads.

I should add that that’s not to say that I don’t support widespread increase of availability of voluntary contraception. But I believe that such draconian measures as state-enforced one-child policies are largely unwarranted.

[ March 21, 2002: Message edited by: echidna ]</p>
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Old 03-21-2002, 12:32 PM   #49
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Jamie_L:

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However, I would like to say something about equal protection under the law. It seems to me that when two organisms are so closely intertwined and one is dependent on the other, biology makes equal protection virtually impossible. In the case of pregnancy, the zygote/embryo/fetus has a right to equal protection of its life, but the pregnant mother has a right to equal protection of her freedoms and the use of her body.
“Equal protection” means that the fetus and the mother have an equal right to be protected against being killed, and that they have an equal right to be protected against restrictions on their freedom. It does not mean that the right to life is to be treated as “equal” to the right not to have one’s freedom restricted. In other words, it doesn’t mean that all rights are equal; it means that all people have the same rights, and in equal measure. Thus, for example, the penalty for murdering someone is the same whether the person in question is a young billionaire with a loving family or an impoverished, senile 95-year-old childless widow. But the penalty for killing the billionaire is not the same as the penalty for stealing his wallet.

Yes, “rights” often come into conflict. When they do, the resolution is based on which rights take priority, not who’s more “valuable” or “developed”. Even so, there are sometimes tough calls. But abortion doesn’t strike me as one of them. If the fetus is a person, there’s really no question which rights take priority here.

Quote:
Furthermore, when a pregnancy occurs, biology places a great burden on the woman but virtually no (biological) burden on the man. There's nothing we can do about that. Abortion does, however, allow women to attain nearly the same biological freedom from pregnancy. If we reinforce that with a legal system, we are now enforcing this unequal burden through force of law. That seems to violate a woman's right to equal protection as compared to men.
Equal protection does not mean trying to produce equal outcomes. People with IQ’s of 160 tend to have more attractive life options than those with IQ’s of 90, and attractive people with likeable personalities have more attractive life options than ugly grouches. But equal protection does not require the law to try to “remedy” such situations by seeing to it that everyone has equally attractive life options. In other words, the “protection” in “equal protection” does not refer to protection against the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune, but protection against being harmed by other people.
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Old 03-21-2002, 01:40 PM   #50
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Yes, “rights” often come into conflict. When they do, the resolution is based on which rights take priority, not who’s more “valuable” or “developed”. Even so, there are sometimes tough calls. But abortion doesn’t strike me as one of them. If the fetus is a person, there’s really no question which rights take priority here
I may be reading this wrong but it appears that you are saying that the fetus rights should always take priority over the woman's rights. Correct me if I'm wrong.

If that is the case you are saying there is no question that the right of the fetus in Callina's case was more important than hers. The outcome is unimportant as long as the law allows the fetus to become a child in every case.

Edit that to say that the law makes it illegal to interfere with the fetus becoming a child otherwise you run the risk of blaming women who miscarry.

[ March 21, 2002: Message edited by: Danya ]

[ March 21, 2002: Message edited by: Danya ]</p>
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