It's really hard to follow what you're saying since you keep changing your terminology.
You have repeatedly stated that you do not see any difference between being a person and being a human being - so I was using your terminology. I'm assuming here that when you say "human being" then this entails being a member of the human species.
You're all over the map here contradicting yourself. Is there a distinction between personhood (being a person) and being a human being (i.e. being a member of the human species?) Yes or no?
And to answer your question, I consider a brain dead body on life support to be a hunk of meat.
am asking you why you believe that a zygote does not have the same fundamental right to not be killed when innocent like a woman does; and you refuse to engage — Bob Ross
I am asking you why you believe that a zygote does not have the same fundamental right to not be killed when innocent like a woman does — Bob Ross
f you had to choose between saving a fertility clinic where a million (or a billion or a trillion) zygotes are stored or saving an orphanage where a dozen kids are trapped in the burning building, do you really have to think about — RogueAI
If you can't see that Mrs Smith has rights not had by a cyst, no theory that I could offer would help you.I am asking you why you believe that a zygote does not have the same fundamental right to not be killed when innocent like a woman does; and you refuse to engage. — Bob Ross
For what it's worth, Jewish law:
Scientists in the study of human origins place a lot of significance to burial of the dead. I've never thought through what that really means. — frank
That's not quite right. If there were a vote in 'merca, it would be legal. And elsewhere - in roughly comparable nations - it is a non-issue. Those nations in which it remains problematic are authoritarian, so whatever consensus there is remains hidden behind ideology.Abortion is a super controversial topic, and there absolutely no consensus — Bob Ross
Not mine. I'm asking instead what folk think about the right of Mrs Smith and the rights of a cyst. If they think the cyst is the equal of Mrs Smith, that is not a fact about cysts and Mrs Smith, but a fact about them. They stand judged by their judgement.What kind of intellectually lazy, disingenuous response is that?!? — Bob Ross
I don't think there is anything here with which to engage. If I were to hold up a hand and say "here is a hand" and you asked for proof, there would similarly be little more to say.Otherwise, there's nothing for me to engage with you about. — Bob Ross
That's not really my concern. First, I would not expect to change your mind, since your view is doubtless close to what has been called your "form of life" and not really open to discussion. Second, I'm not doing politics here, but ethics. I have shown a method that can be applied to ethical issues in order to cut through the bullshit. We differ as to what we think folk should do.As a side note, how do you expect to convince a pro-life person that your position is correct if you just blanketly assert and say it is obviously true as justification? — Bob Ross
I have shown a method that can be applied to ethical issues in order to cut through the bullshit. We differ as to what we think folk should do.
Second, I'm not doing politics here, but ethics
If I were to hold up a hand and say "here is a hand" and you asked for proof, there would similarly be little more to say.
That's not quite right. If there were a vote in 'merca, it would be legal
Yep. Although I'd characterise it as that a woman has standing not had by a cyst. I'm sorry you can't see that.Banno, do you really believe that it is equally as obvious that a woman should have a right to abortion as the fact that your hand exists? C'mon man. — Bob Ross
Well, yes. But you would have me add to that literature.it is a complex issue, and is clearly not resolved in the philosophical literature on abortion. — Bob Ross
The obligation to bury applies to every corpse, even criminals who have been put to death, the unclaimed slain, suicides, and strangers to the community. To be denied burial was the most humiliating indignity that could be inflicted on the deceased, for it meant “to become food for beasts of prey”. — Hanover
There have been votes; and red states vote no; and blue states vote yes. There is no consensus. — Bob Ross
That's not quite right. If there were a vote in 'merca, it would be legal. And elsewhere - in roughly comparable nations - it is a non-issue. Those nations in which it remains problematic are authoritarian, so whatever consensus there is remains hidden behind ideology.
Seems to me there are obvious limits here, but there also doesn't seem to be no rights. For example, if a person spends their life trying to protect an ecosystem by acquiring land to create a nature reserve, all else equal, it seems unethical to ignore their will and sell the land off to loggers. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Now, wills are a legal issue, but their presumably a legal issue because they have some degree of ethical valance. If people's identities and rights completely vanish at their death it's not even clear why their children should inherit their estate. But "dispossessing the widow and the orphan," is one of the key things railed against as sin/wickedness in the Bible and plenty of other cultural and religious contexts as well. — Count Timothy von Icarus
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