Unjustified killing of people like us is immoral... — Rank Amateur
Unjustified killing of people like us is immoral, and an important part of what makes it immoral is it deprives them of their future.
We good on this ? — Rank Amateur
P2. From a very early point in a pregnancy there is a unique human organism. — Rank Amateur
The effect of the loss of my biological life is the loss to me — Rank Amateur
P3. All adult humans undergo the same process of development — Rank Amateur
P4. Each human being on the planet can directly trace their past as a biological creature on earth from now back to their unique human organism as defined in P2 — Rank Amateur
P5. All things that are part of a unique past time line as defined in P4, where at one time a future on the same time line. — Rank Amateur
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↪Rank Amateur A human being can be traced back to a zygote? Sure. — Banno
P6. If P5, all human organisms as defined in P2 are on a unique time line that encompasses their unique human future much like ours — Rank Amateur
Here is the problem with personhood, in moral/ethical arguments -
The core issue is, is it biology or something else that makes us a moral actor? If biology, the answer is easy. If something else, what. And all criteria expect one fails on begging the question.
Entity A is not a person because it does not have characteristic X
However characteristic X is in entity B and entity B is a person
Then they modify characteristic X so it only applies to entity A
Leaving the logic: entity A is not a person because entity A is not a person
The exception is the embodied mind argument that our personhood has nothing at all to do with biology. We do not exist as persons until we are an embodied mind. Most often agreed to be sometime in early childhood. This argument is logical and persuasive, the only major issue is it allows infanticide, which as to your whole point above people generally reject. — Rank Amateur
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