TMF!
For the sake of argument, if it is true that human beings require time for [to maintain] their own existence, and to get to point B (birth), there logically must be a point A (conception), then how does one "prove personhood"? — 3017amen
I think you might be reading too much into it. We use words to communicate to the people around us and it's doubtful everyone is clued into all the nuances that might be impregnated into every word choice. The point being, maybe I meant to use the term "impregnated" here for the double entendre or maybe I was oblivious for a fleeting moment that we were talking about aborting pregnancies and it was just a distracting word choice.
My guess is that it depends upon who's doing the talking and some might mean some things that others did not. I would assume there are languages out there that lack the personal pronoun altogether (as I'm told is the case for Japanese), but I don't think we can then say the Japanese don't fully recognize the difference between people and hats. — Hanover
No, because its logically necessary that our existence starts at conception. In other words, contingent, time dependent beings require a sense of time (for them to exist), regardless of whether its illusionary.
And so I think I already have my answer: Personhood becomes moot, no? — 3017amen
However, time doesn't [seem to] figure in this equation. — TheMadFool
An completely plausible explanation. Yet, I wonder...pro-choicers are, at the end of the day, making the exact same claim - the fetus is an "it" just as a piece of nail you get rid off with a manicure is an "it" - albeit in different words. — TheMadFool
Correct...and that's my point. If logically it did figure into this thinking, it would (in principle) make abortion 'logically impossible' (loosely). And that's if the conclusion of ' human beings require time for [to maintain] their own existence" is sound. Make sense? ( In other words, 'personhood' becomes irrelevant because anywhere along/within the process of time it's still 'a person'.) — 3017amen
But the French insist upon assigning a gender to everything and they don't use a gender neutral pronoun, so am I to assume they think differently of trees than English speakers? This is all a matter of convention. I might be pro-choice and still refer to a male embryo as a he, even though I don't respect its personhood. The gender designations in English truly refer to genders, not to animate versus inanimate objects as far as I can tell. I would ask a child with a doll "what is her name?", not because I think the doll is a person, but because it has a gender of sorts. I call my dog "she" and I surely don't think it's a person. — Hanover
The genitive form its has been used to refer to human babies and animals, although with the passage of time this usage has come to be considered too impersonal in the case of babies — Wikipedia
Ah! I see what you're getting at but I don't think time is necessary to make sense of coming into being.
A fetus begins its journey in the plane of existence when sperm & egg unite into a zygote. Nowhere in the preceding sentence did I employ the concept of time. — TheMadFool
TMF!
Not sure I'm following you there. Again, for the sake of 'logic', if time is required (logically necessary) for human existence, the personhood argument becomes irrelevant. Think of it as an existential argument.
(Your "journey" requires time.) — 3017amen
I mean I understand your point - the usage of words are a matter of convention and don't reflect a point a view of those who utter/write them. Yet, as the quote above, from Wikipedia, clearly shows, people do care about people's choice of words i.e. they read intent into them. I was simply following the crowd. Erroneously perhaps. — TheMadFool
Word choice is obviously important, and in formal settings (politics, business, law), people are very careful how they phrase things. — Hanover
I mean maybe pronoun choice is one piece of evidence you could look at in deciphering community views regarding fetuses, but it seems like a really small piece of information that wouldn't carry a whole lot of weight. — Hanover
The limits of my language are the limits of my world — Ludwig Wittgenstein
The limits of my language are the limits of my world
— Ludwig Wittgenstein
What do you think Ludwig Wittgenstein meant by that? — TheMadFool
From the last discussion I had with you, I'm beginning to think time isn't an objective part of reality. Consider an object and suppose it appears red to you, blue to me, and yellow to someone else. From this fact alone - that the color of the object differs from person to person - I can draw the conclusion, on pain of contradiction, that color isn't an objective property of give object - objective properties don't change like that. Similarly, as the theory of relativity entails, my time is neither your time nor anyone else's i.e. it changes with perspective, or with what physicists call "frame of reference". Doesn't that indicate that time isn't an objective part of reality? — TheMadFool
I would assume there are languages out there that lack the personal pronoun altogether (as I'm told is the case for Japanese), but I don't think we can then say the Japanese don't fully recognize the difference between people and hats. — Hanover
That an event that cannot be reduced to language didn't occur in any meaningful way. — Hanover
we know time is logically necessary for its existence. — 3017amen
What do you have on Nikola Tesla? What do you have on Elon Musk? How many rockets have you sent into space? What does Musk have on extra-terrestrial life forms who may possess intelligence on different orders of magnitude than our own?What's a two month fetus have on a 10 year old chimp? — Coben
Doesn't this mean that time too, being a relative concept, is not objective? — TheMadFool
The genitive form its has been used to refer to human babies and animals, although with the passage of time this usage has come to be considered too impersonal in the case of babies — Wikipedia
Please examine pain more carefully. — TheMadFool
When you say that you find it ridiculous that people should engage in the procreative act 24/7 if they're not to deny life then you should know how equally, if not more, ridiculous it is to say that you should use Hydrogen and Oxygen to put out a fire because water is H2O. — TheMadFool
Likewise, the question of personhood - the possibility of murder - arises only after fertilization has occurred. — TheMadFool
All I’m trying to say is that “denial of life” is not a valid objection to abortion since if it were it would be an objection to every second spent not having children — khaled
"In the ordinary course of nature this is the condition of the child in its mother's womb, a condition neither merely bodily not merely mental, but psychics- a correlation of soul to soul. Here are two individuals, yet in undivided psychic unity: the one as yet no self, as yet nothing impenetrable, incapable of resistance: the other is its actuating subject, the single self of the two. The mother is the genius of the child; for by genius we commonly mean the total mental self-hood, as it has existence of its own, and constitutes the subjective substantiality of someone else who is only externally treated as an individual and has only a nominal independence. The underlying essence of the genius is the sum total of existence, of life, and of character, not as a mere possibility, or capacity, or virtuality, but as efficiently and realized activity.." Hegel in Philosophy of Mind — Gregory
don't think time and the physical are so deeply connected that the latter can't exist without the former. As an example of existence being independent of time I'd like to point you in the direction of theism which has god existing but outside of time [and space]. If theism has any relevance here, it's that existence doesn't need time. I maybe wrong. — TheMadFool
at the speed of light time stops — 3017amen
Doesn't that imply that time isn't real? I — TheMadFool
I'm not following that, are you trying to imply that personhood iss not real? — 3017amen
Time would come to a stop but would I cease to be a person or would you say that a person is moving at the speed of light? — TheMadFool
How is that germane to personhood? — 3017amen
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