Viability is about the connection between the vascular system and the alveoli in the lungs. It's called the AC membrane (alveolar capillary). It starts approaching functionality around 22 weeks. — frank
If consciousness and viability happened to occur at the same time, that was coincdental. — Hanover
Consciousness cannot emerge before 24 gestational weeks when the thalamocortical connections from the sense organs are established. Thus the limit of legal abortion at 22-24 weeks in many countries makes sense.
The fetus is minimally conscious before that. I think you're looking for a higher level of consciousness. — frank
Functional MRI and electrophysiology studies suggest consciousness depends on large-scale thalamocortical and corticocortical interactions.
The fetus has a brain-like structure at 3 weeks. I'll put you down for supporting abortion up to 2 weeks after conception. — frank
There’s around five pounds of single-celled organisms in the human body that few care enough about to even feed properly. — praxis
So your view isn't scientific. You just hold to that folk wisdom. — frank
How would you show that this view is wrong? — frank
There's science that says that? — frank
I don't think there's really a scientific dividing line when it comes to consciousness, owing in part to our lack of understanding of what it is and what's required for it. — frank
I think the reason it would feel wrong to kill a fetus over 24 weeks is that it could possibly survive outside the womb. — frank
So there's nothing behavioral that signals cognition to you. It's a matter of wiring? — frank
Do they have enough cognitive capability to show up as human? — frank
The biological difference between you as a zygote and you as an adult was that you were in a different stage of your development. — NOS4A2
I believe members of the species homo sapiens have moral relevance. — NOS4A2
You never once deviated from being this particular human, you still occupy the same location in space and time, no matter what nouns you use to identify the state of your development. — NOS4A2
At what stage in that development is killing her acceptable? Do all the complex cognitive functions need to be developed at the same time, or does one or the other function take precedence? — NOS4A2
It’s all too arbitrary for my tastes — NOS4A2
I personally need a solid unit of value — NOS4A2
There is nothing else with our genetic makeup. There is only one extant species of human beings. — NOS4A2
None of the things I mentioned are genetically similar to human beings in any way. — NOS4A2
Which non-human organisms with human DNA are you talking about? — NOS4A2
This paper re-examines the question of whether quirks of early human foetal development tell against the view (conceptionism) that we are human beings at conception. A zygote is capable of splitting to give rise to identical twins. Since the zygote cannot be identical with either human being it will become, it cannot already be a human being. Parallel concerns can be raised about chimeras in which two embryos fuse. I argue first that there are just two ways of dealing with cases of fission and fusion and both seem to be available to the conceptionist. One is the Replacement View according to which objects cease to exist when they fission or fuse. The other is the Multiple Occupancy View - both twins may be present already in the zygote and both persist in a chimera. So, is the conceptionist position tenable after all? I argue that it is not. A zygote gives rise not only to a human being but also to a placenta - it cannot already be both a human being and a placenta. Neither approach to fission and fusion can help the conceptionist with this problem. But worse is in store. Both fission and fusion can occur before and after the development of the inner cell mass of the blastocyst - the entity which becomes the embryo proper. The idea that we become human beings with the arrival of the inner cell mass leads to bizarre results however we choose to accommodate fission and fusion.
Many things have human DNA, like sperm or a pool of saliva. Human beings have more than DNA. — NOS4A2
I use the term "human being" in the sense that it is a member of species homo sapiens, whether it is developed or not. A fetus is not of some other species. If a human lifecycle begins at conception, then we are speaking of human life and no other. This is an existentialist and "animalist" view rather than an essentialist view. — NOS4A2
The differences are, as far as I can tell, you place moral value on what human beings can do, while I place moral value on what a human being is. Is that fair? — NOS4A2
So it's not that entity X with attributes a, d, l, and q ought not be killed. It's that if entity X has the attributes that satisify what a person is then entity X should not be killed.
I do follow what you're saying, and maybe we're not saying anything terribly different, but you seem to be saying that "Person" is shorthand for saying "entity X with attributes a, d, l, and q," so we needn't elevate the term "Person" to mean something more or different. My view though is that entity Y with attributes a, d, l, and c and not q might also be a "Person," so it serves an important function to place entities X and Y into the "Person" catagorization because in our moral universe, People have special rights. — Hanover
She doesn’t deserve to be killed. — NOS4A2
Here it is: it is wrong to kill an innocent human being. A fetus is an innocent human being. Therefore, it is wrong to kill a fetus. Which premise would you disagree with? — NOS4A2
it seems pretty clear that what's being done is recasting the indirect realist in a way that it can be subsumed under an extended version of 'direct realism'. — AmadeusD
I considered that part irrelevant, insofar as we know nothing of a thing by its effect on our senses, except that is “…an undetermined something….”. To say we know how they affect our senses is already given by sensation, which only informs as to which sense it is, but nothing whatsoever about the thing, except its real existence. — Mww
Yes, it is wrong to intentionally kill a fetus for the same reasons it is wrong to kill any other human being. — NOS4A2
You can disagree with the premise that a fetus is a human being, or that it is not wrong to kill human beings, but it’s difficult to reasonably do so. — NOS4A2
What if the mother wants the child. Does the zygote then deserve a chance at life and become worthy of protection.. — NOS4A2
What biological differences make it not wrong to kill and embryo, but wrong to kill a baby? — NOS4A2
I’ve already described my reasoning and the entities it applies to as best as possible. — NOS4A2
The baby was an embryo. — NOS4A2
I would refrain as best as possible from positing phantom properties and folk biology. — NOS4A2
If I ask you to show me what makes it a person... — NOS4A2
If you’re going to condemn some human beings to death because you’ve relegated them to the status of non-person, you better have something better than your own thoughts and feelings. — NOS4A2
I don’t understand why I need to point to a property of “wrongness”. I also never said someone needs to point to a measurable property of being a person. I was saying there is no such measurable property, so it makes zero sense that I would say you need to point to one. — NOS4A2
My argument this whole time is that it’s wrong to intentionally kill a human being (unless he deserves it or it is in self-defense), to deprive him of life. A fetus is a human being. — NOS4A2
If not-A entails (B and (not-B)), then A is entailed. Is that what you're saying isn't the case?
Is B here the proposition that the universe has an nth term? And A is the proposition that there's a non-contingent entity in the universe's series of terms? — Hallucinogen
given that all non-contingent entities are necessarily omnipotent and eternal — Hallucinogen
To deny theism is to deny a necessary entity — Hallucinogen
….but only know its appearance…..no. The thing-in-itself does not appear; if it did, it wouldn’t be in-itself. It would be that object of sense as mere appearance, hence the contradiction. — Mww
viz., the way in which our senses are affected by this unknown something.
And we indeed, rightly considering objects of sense as mere appearances, confess thereby that they are based upon a thing in itself, though we know not this thing as it is in itself, but only know its appearances, viz., the way in which our senses are affected by this unknown something.
There’s a world, it’s really a world…..so what? World being, of course, an abstract entity. Sorta like Rawls (?)….where’s the university.
(Crap. I can't remember the author or the name of the paradox. Maybe identity. Guy sees all the accoutrements which constitute a university, but wants to know where the university he came to visit is located.) — Mww
