Thank you for your thoughtful response.hadespussercats wrote:This was a big assumption you made in your response to my presentation:While I do think there are points in the course of fetal development where it would be difficult to argue for full personhood, I do actually think the fetus is a baby long before it is born. I experienced a connection to my son long before he was born, thought of him as a person, saw images of him acting like a baby. If I'd lost the pregnancy at eight months I would have mourned it as the loss of a child.Seth wrote:Well, as I said, like any individual right, the exercise of the right to abortion is subject to reasonable regulation in the public interest. Knowing full well that you will likely maintain that a fetus is not a "person" and therefore has no rights to be respected or considered in such decisions, I want to point out that "personhood" is not, so far, subject to an objective scientific definition. Instead, it's a moral, ethical and social determination made by a particular society based on the dominant mores and beliefs of the culture involved, and that accordingly the state's interest in protecting the rights of the fetus grows along with fetal development.
Here's how I see it-- a baby in utero, and the clump of rapidly-dividing cells that might grow into that baby, are living essentially parasitically off a woman. In my case, I was a willing host. But some women aren't. A baby in utero feeds off another person, changes that person's body irrevocably, subjects her to grave physical and mental risks, takes over her health and her life for months. I don't think any person has the right to do that to another person without that other person's consent.
Now I can almost hear you saying, "She consented to that arrangement when she had sex." I don't see it that way-- as I've explained above.
I think a woman has a right to kill that person that's sucking her very life force, in an act of self-defense. But this situation only exists up to the point of birth.
In your scenario, the moment of conception is your hard-and-fast line even though there are nuances (like the moment of implantation, etc.) that muddy the waters. In my scenario, the moment of birth is the hard-and-fast line. in terms of the baby's physical being, not much has necessarily changed. But the relationship between the mother/host and the baby/parasite is irrevocably different.
I just wanted to put that out there for clarity. I'm not sure how important it is to the discussion at hand.
First, to be precise, as to the moment that a new human being is created, it's not "conception," which is a vague term meaning the moment the sperm penetrates the egg wall and the egg then becomes impervious to other sperm. This is certainly an identifiable instant in time, but at that time the sperm and egg are still only the individual components of the parents, a spermatozoon and an egg. They each perform certain biological processes over the next 24 or so hours, like unzipping their DNA, but it is universally recognized by embryologists that a new human being comes into existence not at fertilization, but at the formation of the zygote, which is when the maternal and paternal chromosomes align along the spindle apparatus and combine to create a new and entirely unique set of genes. This is indisputably the instant of the formation of the first cell of the new organism. From that moment on, until the eventual death of the organism, it is indisputably a unique, living human organism that has achieved the state of "being" or existence. Therefore it is a "human being" at that moment, and at every stage of development both inside and outside the womb. It never changes its nature. It does not mutate from being a clump of monkey or fish cells into a human fetus at some point, it is always and irrevocably human from that moment on.
Everything that happens after that moment in time is nothing more than the natural course of biological development of the zygote into a fully-formed adult human being who eventually ages and dies.
This is objective, scientific fact, not speculation or religious dogma. This is not a muddying of the waters, it's a clarification of the facts of human biological development.
In order to be rational, we must of necessity proceed from those indisputable scientific facts of biology when discussing and analyzing the social, moral, ethical and political aspects of human reproduction. Therefore, as a basic premise from which I argue, it must be recognized that at any time after the zygote has formed, we are discussing the disposition of a living human being. Not necessarily a "person" in the law who is endowed with rights and entitled to constitutional protections, and not necessarily a sentient human being capable of cognition and/or feeling pain, but a human being nonetheless in every factual and material respect.
I point this out specifically because it is very common for abortion advocates to minimize, deny and dismiss the scientific facts by claiming that a fetus is not a human being or a person, it's just a clump of cells. But any rational person, which includes you, recognizes that a fetus in utero ten seconds before natural delivery is not substantially biologically different from that same fetus ten seconds after delivery. And as technology improves, the viability of a fetus outside the womb is being pushed back farther and farther before full natural gestation and birth at 37 weeks. It's not at all unusual for premature babies to survive today at 24 weeks, and the record appears to be 21 weeks and six days, (Amillia Taylor, born October 24, 2006), which further blurs the line that you would choose to mark "personhood."
So, in my view, the moment of delivery is not an objectively identifiable moment in time, based on science and the development of the fetus, at which a fetus is or may be endowed with rights and entitled to protection. That particular moment is highly arbitrary, as we can see, because a fetus may be delivered, either vaginally or by c-section, at any time between 21 weeks and 37 weeks and still be biologically viable outside the womb. Thus, being born is not a standard that a rational person can view as determinative from the scientific perspective. It's essentially making an entirely arbitrary decision that (assuming arguendo a late-term abortion) at 37 weeks minus 1 minute the fetus is something entirely different and biologically distinct in ways that would make it non-human and not a person from the same fetus at 37 weeks plus 1 minute after the fetus has been delivered. To me, this is an entirely irrational and arbitrary decision point.
In point of fact, there is only one difference between a full-term fetus in the birth-canal ready to be delivered and a born infant at the moment after delivery: the physical location of the baby changes from inside the uterus to outside the uterus. In that moment, it is only a location change. The fetus does not change it's biological makeup or nature, it does not change from a fish to a human, it doesn't even change its biological functioning for several moments after birth. It still gets nourishment and oxygen from the placenta just as it did a moment earlier.
Therefore, in my view, particularly in light of fetal viability long before 37 weeks, withholding the endowment of civil rights and personhood from a fetus until the moment of birth is arbitrary, unreasonable and irrational in the extreme. And doing so is nothing more than a useless and immoral remnant of religious belief that has been wrongfully adopted into the law. It is religious tradition that only a born child is a "person" for religious purposes, and indeed some religions wait as long as 30 days AFTER birth before recognizing that an infant is a person for religious purposes. This cultural meme became enshrined in the law long, long ago, but it is now without rational basis and is an entirely arbitrary and irrational demarcation point for determining when an infant is a person.
Science demands that we acknowledge the biological realities of human gestation and development and that we find an objective and scientifically valid stage in fetal development at which it is rational and reasonable to make the claim that a "person" now exists, and that this objective scientific determination be enshrined in our laws for the protection of the new human person, irrespective of that human person's physical location within or without the mother's uterus.
What that objective point in fetal development is can be further discussed. I have identified one specific event as a possible metric, but there may be others and I'm open to discussing them.
And you are absolutely right, I do in fact argue that while it may be technically true that a fetus is parasitical on the mother, it's there by invitation, so from a social policy perspective the mother may be compelled to honor the contract she ratified with the fetus (and the father) by voluntarily engaging in the sex act and allowing the zygote to form. There is no absolute right on the part of the mother to terminate the life of a living human being merely because that living human being is dependent upon the mother for life. The same remains true of the infant after birth, it is helpless and will die without maternal support, so again birth is an arbitrary event not an objective one. The only thing about birth that is different from pre-birth is that once born, the infant may be physically supported (parasitical upon) someone other than the natural mother. But it must be supported both before and after birth, for quite some time, so the "parasite" argument does not weigh very heavily with me when compared to the consequences to the fetus if the mother refuses to provide support.
If the mother refuses to provide support to the "parasite" after birth, she can be put in jail for neglect or worse. But using your argument, if the mother refuses to provide support prior to birth, it's fine because it's a "parasite." But what is in fact different other than the location of the child and the precise form of support that society requires be provided to the child?
If the fetus is delivered at 21 weeks, the mother is obligated (in normal circumstances) to care for the child just as she is if the child is delivered at 37 weeks. So why cannot the mother be required to provide uterine support between 21 and 37 weeks for the same justifiable reasons? I see little by way of objective difference, and little moral difference either, between a fetus of 21 to 24 weeks that's viable outside the womb and a fetus ten seconds after delivery as regards the mother's duty to care for the child.
I am willing to discuss, as I said above, when in the development of the fetus this contract may become enforceable over the objections of the mother. At the moment, under US law, it's at the rather grey zone of "fetal viability." I would prefer to see some other, more objective and determinable specific point in time, but I'm open to discussion.
And once again I want to sincerely thank you for being thoughtful and reasonable in discussing this particularly inflammable topic. It's much appreciated.