Coito ergo sum wrote:Seth wrote:MiM wrote:
So, does the same rule pertain also to abortions? I don't think so, because there is a very clear and simple line we can draw at the birth of a child. We can use that line to break any slippery slope. Being born is widely recognized as a major milestone in human life (we do celebrate birthdays, not conception days nor mother-felt-the-first-movements days, after all). With today's medical practices, it feels rather natural to move the line to the time when the child can survive ex utero.
What fundamental change in the nature of the organism takes place at birth?
1. Breaths air. The sudden change in temperature in the environment of the fetus causes its nervous system to react and a few seconds after birth it is heard to let out a gasp as it takes its first breath. Previously, the lungs are deflated and filled with amniotic fluid and it "breathes" by exchanging oxygen and carbon dioxide through the mother's circulation via the placenta.
2. Eats food. Previously, all nutrients entered through the umbilical cord and placenta.
3. Increased oxygen in the lungs causes a decrease in blood flow resistance to the lungs.
4. Blood flow resistance of the baby's blood vessels also increases.
5. Amniotic fluid drains or is absorbed from the respiratory system.
6. Receptors on the baby's skin send messages to the brain that the baby's body is cold. The baby's body then creates heat by shivering and by burning stores of brown fat, a type of fat found only in fetuses, which is then burned off after birth.
7. Liver functioning changes. After birth the liver produces substances that help the blood to clot, begins breaking down waste products such as excess red blood cells, and produces a protein that helps break down bilirubin. This doesn't happen prior to birth. Before birth the liver acts mainly as a storage unit for iron and sugar.
8. Prior to birth, the gastrointestinal tract does not function at all. After birth, it does.
9. Blood flow through the kidneys increases markedly after birth.
None of which are changes in the fundamental nature of the organism. They are merely developmental and behavioral changes that have been ongoing since the zygote was formed. The organism is and at all times remains a living human organism with unchanging DNA programming information. It is the same "thing" in a different form only. It's nature does not change. It does not turn from an inanimate object to a living creature. It does not evolve from a garden slug to a human being. It is the same thing, the same fundamental grouping of genetic material and instructions that it was in the beginning.
Seth wrote:
Does it turn from one thing into another, or is it simply part of an ongoing developmental process in which, at birth, the physical location and attachment to the mother's uterus changes?
That's a false dichotomy. Yes, it's an ongoing developmental process, but it does become a different thing, also. Just like:
Each of those different things have different legal rights, and is treated differently under the law in a myriad of different ways.
It's not a false dichotomy, and Angelina Jolie was at all times subsequent to her zygotic stage of development, a living human being with unique DNA. Your argument is fallacious because even the adult Angelina Jolie is not the "same thing" at one instant as it is in the next instant. Our cells are constantly dying and being replaced. We continue our course of natural development throughout life, we grow old, our bodies change constantly. It is irrational and illogical to say that the Angelina Jolie seen in "Hackers" is not the Angelina Jolie seen in "Original Sin." They are the same thing at different ages only. She remains the same person as she develops and changes. She never becomes Bill Clinton or Brad Pitt. She never turns from a rock into a lizard and then into Angelina Jolie.
It's pure sophistry (and yes I do know what that word means) to try to stop time at any particular moment and point to a thing and say "this thing is not the same thing as it once was." Biological development and changes that take place throughout the life of a human organism do not make that organism a different "thing" at every time-slice moment. It is a "thing" that is different from it's previous configuration, but it is not a different "thing" entirely. That's like saying that a Chevrolet Blazer is not a Chevrolet Blazer just because someone changed the paint job or modified the suspension. It's still a Chevrolet Blazer with a different paint job and big wheels.
Seth wrote:
Yes, it's a "milestone" in development, but it's really just a location change.
It's not just a location change. It's a fundamental change in what it is. You and I are not our infant selves. That person is gone, and we are fundamentally different. That's why the law the treats us fundamentally different. Human embryos are radically different than human adults and human corpses. We treat all those stages of human development in fundamentally different ways.
They are different in form only. They are identical in DNA composition, and they are not a different "thing," they are the same "thing" at all times, regardless of the developmental form. Your claims about the law are tautological because the law does not define when a "thing" is a "different thing," it merely assigns rights at a particular stage of development of the human organism. Even the Supreme Court recognized this fact in ruling that a fetus IS entitled to respect of its human rights at some stage of its development. The Court never said, in all of Roe v. Wade, that a fetus is not a human "thing," it merely said that human society has refused to grant rights to the fetus many times in human history. But no rational person can deny that the fetus is a living human organism. It's not another "thing." It does not have rights because society CHOOSES not to extend rights to the fetus, not because the fetus is something non-human until it passes from the birth canal. And because a human fetus is not another "thing," and is always a living human organism, there is no objective basis on which to claim that the law, which is a function of social morality and decision making, cannot extend human rights to a fetus at any stage of development, from zygote to birth.
This "it's a different thing" argument is vacuous and irrational sophistry and pettifoggery that has as its only purpose the dehumanization of the obviously living human being as justification for disregarding its human rights.
Seth wrote:
Moral behavior ought to take more account than merely the location of the organism in deciding if it's to live or die, don't you think?
And, it does. In the case of human embryos and human adults, it's not merely location.
Wrong. As I point out in the case of a premature c-section delivery, a fetus becomes a "person" merely through the expedient of leaving the mother's body. Natural birth is not required, merely a change in location. It is therefore illogical and irrational to say that a fetus in utero at an identical stage of development as a living fetus extracted by c-section has any different human rights than the fetus now outside the mother's body. This is amply demonstrated by the laws on late-term abortion, where in some cases, it's legal to deliver all of the child's body except the head, forcibly restrain the complete delivery of the child from the birth canal by pushing against the contractions, slide a pair of scissors up inside the vagina and poke them into the brain of the child, killing it, and then deliver the head. In some places that is a legal abortion. But if the abortionist slips up and allows the baby to slide all the way out, the child is now a person endowed with fundamental civil rights and may not be (but often is) murdered by the abortionist.
This is a change of location alone, nothing else. The child has no opportunity to breath or go through any of the other biological developments that take place AFTER full delivery. The child changes from "clump of cells that can be killed with impunity" to "living human being and person imbued with rights" in the instant the head leaves the birth canal.
A change of location alone imbues the child with human rights. And that is a fact of law.
It's also completely irrational and illogical as a demarcation point for the granting of civil rights, as I've demonstrated.
"Seth is Grandmaster Zen Troll who trains his victims to troll themselves every time they think of him" Robert_S
"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
"Those who support denying anyone the right to keep and bear arms for personal defense are fully complicit in every crime that might have been prevented had the victim been effectively armed." Seth
© 2013/2014/2015/2016 Seth, all rights reserved. No reuse, republication, duplication, or derivative work is authorized.