IMO:
when a woman says "I should decide what to do with my body" I'm like "well... first of all that baby isn't part of your body, it's someone else's body, so yeah..."
what're yalls views on this topic? post below!
Good day and God Bless

Moderator: Moderators
jgh7 wrote:Clownboat wrote:
Words have meanings though.
You defy embryo and blastocyst by insisting on calling those clumps of cells 'humans'. I have seen many a human in my day, but never one that resembles either of those things.Your still using the wrong words here jgh. A fetus is not a human being. A blastocyst is not a human being. You're trying to lay your burden on me by asking when an embryo is a human. I'm saying an embryo is an embryo, not that an embryo is a human.You appeal again to aesthetics to classify a human. I asked you earlier so I'll ask again. What arbitrary "look" passes the threshold of an embryo being human? Is it when it develops eyeballs? Fingers? Legs? If a baby was born without limbs, is it any less of a human? I mean, it doesn't "look" like a complete human according to your rules. It therefore must be less human.
Judging a human by its looks is the most arbitrary subjective judgment for human life possible.
My point is that blastocysts and such are what is actually aborted. You calling a blastocyst a humans is on you.
Clownboat wrote: Not only are they different, but we both agree they don't have the same value either, which makes them even less human.Here is your error. Human life is not dependent on what value we place on it. I simply pointed out that we do value humans more than we do blastocysts. My point again being that a blastocyst is not a human because we don't value them like we do humans. If they were humans, shouldn't they have the same value?I literally just explained how a human life is independent of what value we place on it. So I'll reiterate word for word what was in my previous post: If human life depended on how we value it, then human is not even an objective term. It's completely dependent on one's values. If someone didn't value a born baby, then therefore that baby is not human? This is absurd.
Clownboat wrote: You do a disservice to the un-thinkers around IMO by calling these cells that have a 50% chance of being born 'humans'. In there mind they envision near fully formed babies being brutally ripped from the womb as evidence by some of the posts here already.The disservice that is: You do a disservice to the un-thinkers around IMO by calling these cells that have a 50% chance of being born 'humans'. Some people don't take the time to learn what actually is getting aborted most of the time.I don't know what you mean by un-thinker, and I don't know what disservice I do.
Never said you were trying to do this.I have not tried to trick people into imagining what you say they imagine.
Yet you do call them human...None of my arguments appeal to an embryo looking a certain way and therefore being human.
Please quote me where you got the idea that survival chances are what makes something human? Are you sure I was not pointing out the fact that we value humans more than blastocysts? If so, this is not my fault.Arbitrary aesthetics are your shtick not mine. And once again you mention survival chances as being linked to what is human. I demonstrated how this is nonsensical in previous posts. Whats the point anymore if you're just going to ignore it?
Clownboat wrote: Jgh7, what harm is done if an unwanted blastocyst is removed from a women that would have been naturally aborted on its own even if the mother wanted it?
What harm is done if an unwanted human is removed from a women that would have been naturally aborted on its own even if the mother wanted it?
I argue zero harm, and it doesn't even matter if you call it what it is or if you call it a human. Therefore to condemn and compare the removal of something that might naturally be removed to an actualized, living, breathing human being seems off to me.It's a philosophical question that you refuse to address. It's a question to get you to think, not an argument. Care to address it, or would you like to just continue to claim that I ignore your comments?There's no such thing as naturally aborted, so I assume you meant naturally died. So basically your hypothetical is "We somehow know this blastocyst will die in the near future, and we don't want it, so there's no harm in killing it." But the thing is you don't know its definite future. All you have argued previously is that they have roughly a 50% chance of natural survival. So your hypothetical is dishonest to begin with in pretending we actually know the future.
Clownboat wrote: Remove a human from this world and harm is done. 50% of what you want to call humans will naturally abort, so it could be said that 50% of abortions aren't even harmful, but you would still call those cells human?Not true! I am addressing you calling a blastocyst a human and providing reasons as to why I don't think you should.You continue to insist that chance of survival has something to do with being human.
No. Now why do you insist on calling a blastocyst a human in an abortion debate? I could continue to provide reasons as to why I don't think you should, but you just turn those reasons into what you think I'm arguing for. Example, value = being human or not. No, that is not true, but we do value humans more than blastocyst and you agree, yet you still want to call them humans. Like I have said before, you are free to do so as I am free to use the accurate words.So i'll requote what I said previously that shows the absurdity of this: "I have no issue whatsoever with the high percentage of embryo deaths. What does that have to do at all with distinguishing a human? If we lived in a world where 75% of humans didn't make it to the age of 1, would we therefore say that a true human only occurs after the age of 1?"
Please stop falsely telling me what I am arguing. Again, value doesn't make something human, but pointing out the value difference between an blastocyst and a human to someone that calls a blastocyst a human will not be lost on all the readers here even if it is lost on you.I did a lot of reiterating throughout this post of what I previously said in earlier posts. That means I have already posted arguments equating your views to be illogical. And all you have done is ignore these arguments.
They are the same entity, but killing one of my daughters and killing a blastocyst are worlds apart. It's not descriptive to say we abort humans and you keep insisting that we do. I suspect you may use emotional words for a reason (many do even if not yourself). If not, why not use the more descriptive term for what is being aborted?I'll pose the core of my stance: When a healthy baby is born, we can all agree that it's wrong to kill it. The primary reason I argue that it's wrong is that by killing it, you are destroying its entire future. The exact same holds true for when that baby was in its earlier stages of life as a blastocyst/embryo/fetus. Killing it during those stages would entail destroying the exact same future as that of the baby's. They are not seperate entities. They are the same entity at different stages of their life.
I've explained my stance on why I consider human life occuring at the moment of conception and thus including blastocysts and such. You have not explained any stance for when a human life actually occurs. You have made appeals to aesthetics, survival chances, and subjective human values to insist that I must be wrong. I have shown how these appeals are illogical. Care to actually state your stance on what makes a human a human, and when this occurs?Clownboat wrote:Your still using the wrong words here jgh. A fetus is not a human being. A blastocyst is not a human being. You're trying to lay your burden on me by asking when an embryo is a human. I'm saying an embryo is an embryo, not that an embryo is a human.jgh7 wrote: You appeal again to aesthetics to classify a human. I asked you earlier so I'll ask again. What arbitrary "look" passes the threshold of an embryo being human? Is it when it develops eyeballs? Fingers? Legs? If a baby was born without limbs, is it any less of a human? I mean, it doesn't "look" like a complete human according to your rules. It therefore must be less human.
Judging a human by its looks is the most arbitrary subjective judgment for human life possible.
My point is that blastocysts and such are what is actually aborted. You calling a blastocyst a humans is on you.
You are choosing to dinstinguish a human based on the value the majority of people give it. You're making an appeal to popular opinion which we know is a logical fallacy. Popular opinion does not necessitate truth. Your appeal to popular values as being a good method for concluding that embryos are not human is illogical. This coupled with the fact that my argument does not depend on popular value means that my answer is NO. An embryo need not have the same value as a born human to be human.Clownboat wrote:
Here is your error. Human life is not dependent on what value we place on it. I simply pointed out that we do value humans more than we do blastocysts. My point again being that a blastocyst is not a human because we don't value them like we do humans. If they were humans, shouldn't they have the same value?
You're in no place to be labelling people's arguments as a disservice. Quite frankly it's arrogant. This is a debate forum. I argue my side, you argue yours. I'm fine with you offering counter-arguments to mine, but it's rude and arrogant to be calling my debate a disservice.Clownboat wrote:The disservice that is: You do a disservice to the un-thinkers around IMO by calling these cells that have a 50% chance of being born 'humans'. Some people don't take the time to learn what actually is getting aborted most of the time.I don't know what you mean by un-thinker, and I don't know what disservice I do.
Fine, post number 23 you write this:Clownboat wrote:Please quote me where you got the idea that survival chances are what makes something human? Are you sure I was not pointing out the fact that we value humans more than blastocysts? If so, this is not my fault.jgh7 wrote:Arbitrary aesthetics are your shtick not mine. And once again you mention survival chances as being linked to what is human. I demonstrated how this is nonsensical in previous posts. Whats the point anymore if you're just going to ignore it?
You suggest that an embryo's 50% survival chance should mean that it is not human. Therefore, you link survival chances to what is human.An embryo has a 50% chance to make it to the birthing stage.
Calling it a human while acknowledging this seems to be a stretch IMO.
Fine I'll address it. The hypothetical is that we know 100% that a blastocyst will die in the very near future. Is it wrong then to kill it earlier if we don't want it? My answer is that I don't know if it's wrong. It doesn't seem like a heinous act in my eyes since we know 100% that it will die very soon. There, I have thought about your hypothetical. What would you now like to assert?Clownboat wrote: It's a philosophical question that you refuse to address. It's a question to get you to think, not an argument. Care to address it, or would you like to just continue to claim that I ignore your comments?
Clownboat wrote:Clownboat wrote: Remove a human from this world and harm is done. 50% of what you want to call humans will naturally abort, so it could be said that 50% of abortions aren't even harmful, but you would still call those cells human?Not true! I am addressing you calling a blastocyst a human and providing reasons as to why I don't think you should.jgh7 wrote:You continue to insist that chance of survival has something to do with being human.
Look, you give a reason for why a blastocyst/embryo/fetus is not human. (Ex) We don't value embryos like we do babies, therefore embryos are not human.) I then show you how trying to distinguish a human based off value is illogical. You then agree with me in saying that human life being determined based off value is not logical. So basically what you're doing is using an illogical strategy to label an embryo as not human.Clownboat wrote:No. Now why do you insist on calling a blastocyst a human in an abortion debate? I could continue to provide reasons as to why I don't think you should, but you just turn those reasons into what you think I'm arguing for. Example, value = being human or not. No, that is not true, but we do value humans more than blastocyst and you agree, yet you still want to call them humans. Like I have said before, you are free to do so as I am free to use the accurate words.jgh7 wrote:So i'll requote what I said previously that shows the absurdity of this: "I have no issue whatsoever with the high percentage of embryo deaths. What does that have to do at all with distinguishing a human? If we lived in a world where 75% of humans didn't make it to the age of 1, would we therefore say that a true human only occurs after the age of 1?"
I'm arguing that humans begin at the moment of conception. I have no problem referring to blastocysts/embryos/fetuses by their descriptive terms. I have done so many times in the debate. But my argument is that they are human.Clownboat wrote:They are the same entity, but killing one of my daughters and killing a blastocyst are worlds apart. It's not descriptive to say we abort humans and you keep insisting that we do. I suspect you may use emotional words for a reason (many do even if not yourself). If not, why not use the more descriptive term for what is being aborted?jgh7 wrote: I'll pose the core of my stance: When a healthy baby is born, we can all agree that it's wrong to kill it. The primary reason I argue that it's wrong is that by killing it, you are destroying its entire future. The exact same holds true for when that baby was in its earlier stages of life as a blastocyst/embryo/fetus. Killing it during those stages would entail destroying the exact same future as that of the baby's. They are not seperate entities. They are the same entity at different stages of their life.
If you know this, why bother with debating what a human life is at all? Abortion is about values, not definitions. What is being debated here what makes an entity a person as opposed to mere "human."jgh7 wrote: I literally just explained how a human life is independent of what value we place on it.
jgh7 wrote:Clownboat wrote:Your still using the wrong words here jgh. A fetus is not a human being. A blastocyst is not a human being. You're trying to lay your burden on me by asking when an embryo is a human. I'm saying an embryo is an embryo, not that an embryo is a human.jgh7 wrote: You appeal again to aesthetics to classify a human. I asked you earlier so I'll ask again. What arbitrary "look" passes the threshold of an embryo being human? Is it when it develops eyeballs? Fingers? Legs? If a baby was born without limbs, is it any less of a human? I mean, it doesn't "look" like a complete human according to your rules. It therefore must be less human.
Judging a human by its looks is the most arbitrary subjective judgment for human life possible.
My point is that blastocysts and such are what is actually aborted. You calling a blastocyst a humans is on you.Yup, and I have explained why I personally find this to be wanting, but you take this as if I'm actually arguing for value determining someone being a human and such, which has never been my point.I've explained my stance on why I consider human life occuring at the moment of conception and thus including blastocysts and such.
JGH - A blastocyst is a human.
Clownboat - I don't agree that they are the same and here are some reason why.
JGH - Now I'm going to turn your reasoning into an argument that you are not making. (Now see your very next line below in italic)
Jgh, why am I all of a sudden burdened with needing to explain to you when human life actually occurs? As if that question is even answerable.You have not explained any stance for when a human life actually occurs.
What I can do is provide reasoning as to why I disagree with calling a blastocyst a human. Can you try to understand my reasoning without turning my reasoning into a factual position like, 'value determines if you are human'. Something I have never said. I would prefer to argue for position I have, not ones you think I have.
You are referring to reasons as to why I view a blastocyst differently than an actual human being. These are my reasons, so how can they wrong? You already agree with some of my reasons, like the fact we don't value a blastocyst the same as we do a human. You can ignore these things of course or not find them meaningful for yourself, but you cannot control what I find meaningful when comparing the differences between and blastocyst and a human.You have made appeals to aesthetics, survival chances, and subjective human values to insist that I must be wrong.
I have shown how these appeals are illogical.
They are justifications for why I don't find a blastocyst and a human to be the same thing. How is it illogical that we value blastocysts and humans differently. Please enlighten me.
I have my opinion on this, but for now I am addressing the fact that you call a blastocyst a human and I'm providing reasoning as to why I feel you shouldn't. I have not argued for when a fetus etc... should be called a human.Care to actually state your stance on what makes a human a human, and when this occurs?
Clownboat wrote:
Here is your error. Human life is not dependent on what value we place on it. I simply pointed out that we do value humans more than we do blastocysts. My point again being that a blastocyst is not a human because we don't value them like we do humans. If they were humans, shouldn't they have the same value?Stop it! Read the above again that you quoted and see that I did not make a qualification for when a thing is a human. I argue for not including a blastocyst as a human. Please acknowledge this.You are choosing to dinstinguish a human based on the value the majority of people give it.
What are you talking about?You're making an appeal to popular opinion which we know is a logical fallacy.
Popular opinion has not been a reason I have used to explain why I find you calling a blastocyst a human to be in error.Popular opinion does not necessitate truth our appeal to popular values as being a good method for concluding that embryos are not human is illogical.
You claim they are the same.
I have provided differences, like how we don't value them the same. Please acknowledge that this does not mean I am making some claim as to when a thing is a human.
And we agree that they don't have the same value, yet you would still call them the same word. This is the part I question.This coupled with the fact that my argument does not depend on popular value means that my answer is NO. An embryo need not have the same value as a born human to be human.
Clownboat wrote:The disservice that is: You do a disservice to the un-thinkers around IMO by calling these cells that have a 50% chance of being born 'humans'. Some people don't take the time to learn what actually is getting aborted most of the time.I don't know what you mean by un-thinker, and I don't know what disservice I do.I am in a place to have an opinion though. Please acknowledge that what you quoted above includes me saying that it is my opinion. It is my opinion you do a disservice. Convince me otherwise and I will change my opinion. You in fact are not in a position to state my opinions.You're in no place to be labelling people's arguments as a disservice.
Then stop crying and start trying to convince me that my opinion is wrong. I find it telling that you can't and you prefer to make straw-man arguments as to what my point is here.Quite frankly it's arrogant. This is a debate forum. I argue my side, you argue yours. I'm fine with you offering counter-arguments to mine, but it's rude and arrogant to be calling my debate a disservice.
Example: "So you are saying value determines if someone is human"
All I can do is sit here and slap my forehead.
Fine, post number 23 you write this:Clownboat wrote:Please quote me where you got the idea that survival chances are what makes something human? Are you sure I was not pointing out the fact that we value humans more than blastocysts? If so, this is not my fault.jgh7 wrote:Arbitrary aesthetics are your shtick not mine. And once again you mention survival chances as being linked to what is human. I demonstrated how this is nonsensical in previous posts. Whats the point anymore if you're just going to ignore it?An embryo has a 50% chance to make it to the birthing stage.
Calling it a human while acknowledging this seems to be a stretch IMO.Perhaps this is a reading comprehension issue?You suggest that an embryo's 50% survival chance should mean that it is not human. Therefore, you link survival chances to what is human.
See what you quoted above and acknowledge that what I stated addresses that we should not call an embryo a human. It's just another difference I see between humans and blastocysts. One is actualized already, the other only has a 50% chance. This is a difference between them. I question why you want to use the same word when speaking about these different things. Can you address that without making a straw-man?
Clownboat wrote: It's a philosophical question that you refuse to address. It's a question to get you to think, not an argument. Care to address it, or would you like to just continue to claim that I ignore your comments?Now contrast this with actual human beings. We both know they will all die at some point, but there IS harm done if you removed it from this planet before said time has come.Fine I'll address it. The hypothetical is that we know 100% that a blastocyst will die in the very near future. Is it wrong then to kill it earlier if we don't want it? My answer is that I don't know if it's wrong. It doesn't seem like a heinous act in my eyes since we know 100% that it will die very soon. There, I have thought about your hypothetical. What would you now like to assert?
1) Not philosophically heinous to kill a blastocyst that we know will naturally abort.
2) Yet it would be heinous to kill a born human being anytime during its life prior to when it would pass.
See a difference? Is it still better to call a blastocyst a human?
THIS IS NOT AN ARGUMENT FOR WHEN A HUMAN LIFE BEGINS.
Clownboat wrote:Clownboat wrote: Remove a human from this world and harm is done. 50% of what you want to call humans will naturally abort, so it could be said that 50% of abortions aren't even harmful, but you would still call those cells human?Not true! I am addressing you calling a blastocyst a human and providing reasons as to why I don't think you should.jgh7 wrote:You continue to insist that chance of survival has something to do with being human.Hold my hand and see if you can grasp my actual argument. Humans, have already been born/actualized. Blastocysts are not humans because they have not been actualized and may not ever be actualized. See how one is actualized and the other only has a 50% chance. Should we really call blastocysts humans? I argue that a blastocyst has a 50% chance of becoming an actualized human and to call it a human is premature. We don't even value them the same as we do humans and you agree with this.And the reason in particular here is that it has a 50% survival chance. That means you are insisting that this survival chance has something to do with it being human or not human. Otherwise, why are you repeatedly mentioning survival chance if it has no bearing on distinguishing it as human or not???
Clownboat wrote:No. Now why do you insist on calling a blastocyst a human in an abortion debate? I could continue to provide reasons as to why I don't think you should, but you just turn those reasons into what you think I'm arguing for. Example, value = being human or not. No, that is not true, but we do value humans more than blastocyst and you agree, yet you still want to call them humans. Like I have said before, you are free to do so as I am free to use the accurate words.jgh7 wrote:So i'll requote what I said previously that shows the absurdity of this: "I have no issue whatsoever with the high percentage of embryo deaths. What does that have to do at all with distinguishing a human? If we lived in a world where 75% of humans didn't make it to the age of 1, would we therefore say that a true human only occurs after the age of 1?"Wrong (well technically, that could be a reason for a person to not consider a blastocyst a human, but that is not what I'm doing here). I argue for using the more descriptive term.Look, you give a reason for why a blastocyst/embryo/fetus is not human.
Wrong. Try this:(Ex) We don't value embryos like we do babies, therefore embryos are not human.
'Therefore, since we acknowledge this difference (and others) it would be better to call a blastocyst (for ex) a blastocyst and not a human. Not that it isn't human.
I then show you how trying to distinguish a human based off value is illogical.
Straw-man, I have not made this argument. I do notice the difference between these two things that you would prefer to use the same word to describe for both though. Why not use the more descriptive term?
You acknowledge this while still trying to claim that I am making this argument. You can't have your cake and eat it too.You then agree with me in saying that human life being determined based off value is not logical.
I believe you are confused about what I am doing.So basically what you're doing is using an illogical strategy to label an embryo as not human.
Clownboat wrote:They are the same entity, but killing one of my daughters and killing a blastocyst are worlds apart. It's not descriptive to say we abort humans and you keep insisting that we do. I suspect you may use emotional words for a reason (many do even if not yourself). If not, why not use the more descriptive term for what is being aborted?jgh7 wrote: I'll pose the core of my stance: When a healthy baby is born, we can all agree that it's wrong to kill it. The primary reason I argue that it's wrong is that by killing it, you are destroying its entire future. The exact same holds true for when that baby was in its earlier stages of life as a blastocyst/embryo/fetus. Killing it during those stages would entail destroying the exact same future as that of the baby's. They are not seperate entities. They are the same entity at different stages of their life.See post 26:I'm arguing that humans begin at the moment of conception. I have no problem referring to blastocysts/embryos/fetuses by their descriptive terms. I have done so many times in the debate. But my argument is that they are human.
I just wish people would have a deep respect for the life of unborn humans. Maybe not as deep as that of born humans, but still deep enough to accept that abortion does constitute as killing a human.
You do in fact seem to have a problem referring to blastocysts/embryos/fetuses by their descriptive terms.
Pointing out how losing a daughter and losing an embryo are worlds apart is another aspect of my argument as to why we should call them by their descriptive words. Yet you seem to prefer to call them human no matter the stage as evidenced above.I gave you my argument, you agree that they're the same entity, but your objection is that killing a daughter is worlds apart from killing an embryo. Is this an appeal to emotion, or would you like to explain the logic behind it and how it necessitates that an embryo is not human.
jgh7 wrote: [Replying to post 33 by Bust Nak]
When I scratch my butt, those cells are human, but they are not a person.How is person different from human? They are synonyms to me.
Here is the error. You actually did make a qualification for when a thing is a human. If you argue that a blastocyst is not a human because of so and so reasons, then it means that a human would not have violated so and so reasons. Therefore you are making qualifications for when a thing is a human.Clownboat wrote: I did not make a qualification for when a thing is a human. I argue for not including a blastocyst as a human. Please acknowledge this.
But you ARE making a claim as to when a thing is human. By pointing out differences, you are attempting to distinguish a human from not a human.Clownboat wrote: I have provided differences, like how we don't value them the same. Please acknowledge that this does not mean I am making some claim as to when a thing is a human.
What do you mean by actualized? Do you mean born? That's how you originally referred to it. So basically are you saying that a human is only a human after it is born? So 1 minute before it's born it is not a human?Clownboat wrote: Perhaps this is a reading comprehension issue?
See what you quoted above and acknowledge that what I stated addresses that we should not call an embryo a human. It's just another difference I see between humans and blastocysts. One is actualized already, the other only has a 50% chance. This is a difference between them. I question why you want to use the same word when speaking about these different things. Can you address that without making a straw-man?
There see? You state a blastocyst is not a human because it has not been actualized. You have a criteria by which you distinguish what is a human and what is not a human.Clownboat wrote:
Hold my hand and see if you can grasp my actual argument. Humans, have already been born/actualized. Blastocysts are not humans because they have not been actualized and may not ever be actualized. See how one is actualized and the other only has a 50% chance. Should we really call blastocysts humans? I argue that a blastocyst has a 50% chance of becoming an actualized human and to call it a human is premature. We don't even value them the same as we do humans and you agree with this.
You yourself said that you acknowledge that there is a difference in value between a baby and a blastocyst. Because of that difference, you label a blastocyst as not a human. But here you insisted that my quote was wrong. But it literally says the exact same thing as your quote!
I'm definitely confused about what you're doing. I think you should be confused about what you're doing as well.Clownboat wrote: I believe you are confused about what I am doing.
I Clownboat officially do not make a qualification for when a thing is a human. I recognize that blastocysts are made up of human cells, but I do not find it accurate and I find it to be a dis-service to many people to label these human cells as humans.Here is the error. You actually did make a qualification for when a thing is a human.
I have stated that they are 'human in origin' and I have given reasons why I don't think you should call a blastocyst a human.If you argue that a blastocyst is not a human
No, I argue that to call a blastocyst a human is not as descriptive and that it confuses many people that believe what they believe about abortion due to emotional reasoning.But you ARE making a claim as to when a thing is human.
I am? Interesting. What did I arrive at? At what point did I argue for when a human being is actualized?By pointing out differences, you are attempting to distinguish a human from not a human.
Clownboat wrote: Perhaps this is a reading comprehension issue?
See what you quoted above and acknowledge that what I stated addresses that we should not call an embryo a human. It's just another difference I see between humans and blastocysts. One is actualized already, the other only has a 50% chance. This is a difference between them. I question why you want to use the same word when speaking about these different things. Can you address that without making a straw-man?
You need to stop telling me what you think I am saying. Stop avoiding my questions.What do you mean by actualized? Do you mean born? That's how you originally referred to it. So basically are you saying that a human is only a human after it is born? So 1 minute before it's born it is not a human?
Clownboat wrote:
Hold my hand and see if you can grasp my actual argument. Humans, have already been born/actualized. Blastocysts are not humans because they have not been actualized and may not ever be actualized. See how one is actualized and the other only has a 50% chance. Should we really call blastocysts humans? I argue that a blastocyst has a 50% chance of becoming an actualized human and to call it a human is premature. We don't even value them the same as we do humans and you agree with this.
I think you just ended this discussion for us. Thank you for this great example! (Above in bold and italic).There see? You state a blastocyst is not a human because it has not been actualized. You have a criteria by which you distinguish what is a human and what is not a human.
Clownboat wrote: I believe you are confused about what I am doing.
What is confusing about me arguing that you (and others like you) should use descriptive terms? Again, just above you HAD to use the term blastocyst like I am arguing for because to refer to it as a human would have made for a non coherent sentence.I'm definitely confused about what you're doing. I think you should be confused about what you're doing as well.
The former is about value, the latter biology. That they seem synonymous to you is problematic. In the most trivial of sense, my hair is human, yet I don't give them a second thought when I cut them off.jgh7 wrote: How is person different from human? They are synonyms to me.
That was what prompted my question to begin with. Why make such a fuss over the distinctions for what is and is not human, when you think value placed over distinctions for what is and is not human is not reliable?Value plays as much a part in an abortion debate as logic does. If someone's values are based off illogical distinctions for what is and is not human, then their values are not a reliable moral indicator of the right or wrongness of abortion.
You say that like there is a logical way of assigning value. Does the phrase "beauty is in the eye of the beholder" mean anything to you? How about "there is no accounting for taste?"ex) The same applies to slavery. During America's slavery times, people didn't value blacks the same as whites. They used the illogical color distinction as the basis for their values. We can see where leaving things based off illogical popular value has gotten us in the past.