First, time isn't real - as you said it's value reduces to zero at light or a faster speed which essentially means time no longer exists. — TheMadFool
Does this mean that a person is not real? Meaning if I have sex, and create a person, that that person is not really real.
I'm not following that... ? — 3017amen
Where does time figure in all of this though? — TheMadFool
This is the point of contention between us. I don't think we're time-dependent because time isn't real. Light travels at the, well, speed of light. For it, according to relativity, time doesn't exist. We, physical beings incapable of speeds of that magnitude, experience time. I'll give you that. Nevertheless, this is as problematic as someone claiming to see a ghost and others not being able to corroborate this claim. At the very least, it raises doubts regarding the existence of ghosts. Are they real or not? Is time real or not?time-dependent beings — 3017amen
At the very least, it raises doubts regarding the existence of ghosts. Are they real or not? Is time real or not? — TheMadFool
Are you suggesting somehow that a person during the procreation process is a ghost? — 3017amen
irrelevance of the OP and the personhood argument — 3017amen
I would say TMF, you were 'wrong' to conflate the illusion of time with the personhood argument. — 3017amen
But if pro-lifers should be having sex 24/7 — TheMadFool
pro-choicers should be trying to enforce a moratorium on sex. After all, if the issue of abortion begins with intercourse for pro-lifers, in all fairness — TheMadFool
said that “denial of life” is an argument that would lead to this. Since if it were a valid argument one would be “denying life” every second they’re not having sex. — khaled
But I still have no clue how what I said leads to this. Why should pro choicers enforce this? — khaled
You seem to be saying that personhood is irrelevant to the abortion issue because a person is a time-dependent entity. — TheMadFool
you seem to be implying that not enough time elapses in a pregnancy for a fetus to become a person. — TheMadFool
No. The logic behind time-dependent Beings make personhood irrelevant because to get to point B (birth), you must have a point A (conception). As soon as conception begins, the clock starts (from beginning to end), and ends whenever the end of one's life occurs.
Metaphorically, you could say that there are different seasons to one's life. When fall begins, if one were to stop time say, halfway through, would you still have fall? And if you did, you would have half-fall. Or if you planted a seed, and at some point the seed stopped growing, would nomenclature (plant-hood) make a difference to its identity as a plant? — 3017amen
Personhood is irrelevant in the sense there never is a person or irrelevant in the sense that there always was a person? — TheMadFool
then pro-choicers, because they can deny life, must abstain from sex. — TheMadFool
Can =/= must. I think you might not be understanding what I’m saying.
The pro life argument of “Abortion is a denial of life which is wrong” is bad because: If it were valid then said pro lifer must have as many children as feasible in order not to be “denying lives” which is bad per their argument. This doesn’t lead to pro choicers having to abstain from having children. Because there is no hypocrisy in saying that “The denying life argument is dumb” and then having kids. — khaled
on what grounds are you making the claim that just because not having sex is a denial of life that pro-lifers must engage in sex 24/7? — TheMadFool
Since the pro-choicer doesn't mind people denying life, it implies that he accepts both methods mentioned above as a means of denying life. Which is better? — TheMadFool
After all, a pro-choicer knows sexual abstention is the best, in the sense least controversial, method available for denying life — TheMadFool
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