And there are Democrat lawmakers quoted as saying that abortions should be allowed up to the moment of birth for any reason. I think we can both agree that there are extremists on both sides of the (any) issue. Fortunately it appears that more moderate minds are winning on this issue as many states are voting to keep a woman's right to choose, but with some restrictions.Well, there are GOP lawmakers who oppose morning after pills/url]. — Michael
This is false. There's more to biology than genetics – there's morphology and physiology – and more than the stuff already contained within a zygote is required for it to grow into a baby (e.g. nutrients from the mother).
OK, construct a trolley-car type scenario (or any scenario really) where you refuse to sacrifice zygotes to save actual persons.
Try it with the human zygotes still in their mother, where they are generally found. For some reason you removed the mother entirely. — NOS4A2
You said "this biology ... is present from the very beginning ... of every human being’s life." Except it's not. The genetics is present but the morphology and physiology aren't.
Then the moral dilemma concerns whether to kill a baby or an adult. We're concerned with whether to kill a baby or a zygote. So for the sake of argument we can assume that the zygote is not growing inside a woman but an artificial womb.
You believe there are just two sets of genes swimming around in there? — NOS4A2
To kill a zygote you abort it. Go give abortions. — NOS4A2
There are 46 DNA molecules, each tightly coiled around proteins, contained within cytoplasm and a cell membrane.
We can assume, for the sake of argument, that we are technologically advanced and have developed artificial wombs within which the zygotes in question are growing.
All of which are biological. — NOS4A2
Isn’t that convenient. Remove the one act under discussion from the argument entirely. — NOS4A2
And? It's not the biological stuff that's morally relevant. Ants are biological. Flies are biological. So what?
We're talking about whether or not it is wrong to kill zygotes. The manner in which the zygotes are killed is presumably irrelevant.
Your deflection is telling.
Flies don’t develop into human beings. — NOS4A2
If they are out of the womb they are already dead. Convenient. — NOS4A2
Develop into human beings. Interesting.
But also, why does it matter? Why is it wrong to kill something that develops into a human being but not something that develops into a fly?
As I said, in the scenario under consideration these are living zygotes growing inside an artificial womb. When we have to choose between doing nothing and letting one baby die or doing something that causes five zygotes to die, what should we do? We should do the thing that causes five zygotes to die.
Fine, we should kill zygotes if and only if no mother is present and doing so will stop a train from running over babies. Now, absent those conditions, is it right or wrong to kill zygotes? — NOS4A2
It's neither right nor wrong. It's morally neutral. We've established from the trolley problem that five zygotes deserve less moral consideration than one baby. And I'll go so far as to say that one million zygotes deserve less moral consideration than one baby. Each individual zygote deserves negligible moral consideration, and certainly when compared to the moral consideration of a woman being forced to carry to term and birth a child.
No, I think killing a human being in its zygote stage is wrong because he doesn't deserve it. — NOS4A2
If you could take a time machine and go back to the time when a mother was an innocent zygote, would it be ok to kill her then? — NOS4A2
And as shown by the trolley problem killing five zygotes is less wrong than allowing one baby to die. Killing ten million zygotes is less wrong than allowing one baby to die.
The moral worth of one zygote is so negligible that killing it is less wrong than forcing a woman to carry it to term and birth it against her wishes.
That depends on whether or not killing the zygote in my grandmother's womb would kill me and my mother, because killing me and my mother would be wrong.
It doesn't follow that it is right to kill zygotes. — NOS4A2
It wouldn't kill you because you weren't born at that time. — NOS4A2
I didn't say it's right. I said it's neutral. The moral worth of a zygote is negligible, as shown by the trolley problem.
I misread and thought you were asking about me going back in time and then someone terminating my grandmother's pregnancy, and that it would be a Marty McFly in Back to the Future situation.
But as for the question as asked, that really depends on how time travel works. Does the future still exist in some sense but changes as the past is changed? That would change my answer. If the future doesn't exist then no, it wouldn't be wrong to terminate the pregnancy (but it may be wrong to have gone back in time as that would have erased what was the present and is now the future).
But you think it’s right so long as the mother desires it, up until and including species extinction. — NOS4A2
But no the future doesn’t exist in the past. — NOS4A2
I think it's not wrong, or at least negligibly wrong, or at least less wrong than forcing the mother to carry the child to term and birth it (much like it's less wrong than allowing a baby to die).
You are making it sound like both republicans and democrats see eye-to-eye on abortion.... — Bob Ross
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.